Category: United Nations

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: UN road safety exhibition at the Palais des Nations to raise awareness about risk factors on the road and existing solutions

    Source: United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

    On the eve of the 8th UN Road safety Week, the United Nations Secretary-General’s Special Envoy for Road Safety, Jean Todt, with support of the Permanent Representation of Malaysia to the UN and International Organizations in Geneva, will launch the UN road safety exhibition. Taking place at the Palais des Nations, Geneva, on Friday, 9 May, the exhibition aims to raise awareness about the risk factors on the road and existing solutions that can improve road safety and save millions of lives worldwide.

    In line with the main theme of the 8th UN Road Safety Week – making cycling and walking safe – the exhibition will feature the “Helmets for Hope” project, which consists of 17 helmets compliant with UN safety standards, and painted by refugees and artists from all over the world. This project is an initiative of the Secretariat of the Special Envoy, in collaboration with Artolution and with the support of Keep Fighting Foundation.

    Motorcycle users are particularly vulnerable on the road. Wearing a helmet that complies with UN safety standards is a game changer. It can reduce the risk of death by over 6 times and reduce the risk of brain injury by up to 74% (WHO 2021). It is therefore urgent to promote the widespread use of UN certified helmets.

    The exhibition will also feature 17 visuals of the UN-JCDecaux campaign #MakeASafety Statement, with the support of the International Olympic Committee.  In addition, there will be vehicle safety demonstrations on the prevention and management of car crashes, including extinguishing battery fire, and a simulation test of driving tired and under influence.

    The exhibition will be followed by a conversation on safe and sustainable mobility in the city, hosted by the Permanent Representation of Belgium to the United Nations and International Organizations in Geneva.

    The silent pandemic on the road

    The Special Envoy for Road Safety, Jean Todt, qualified road crashes as “The Silent Pandemic on the Road”. Every year, the staggering toll of road-related fatalities globally claims the lives of 1.19 million people, leaving 50 million others with severe injuries. Furthermore, road crashes are the leading cause of death for children and young adults aged 5–29 years (WHO 2021). Two months after the Declaration of Marrakesh where Member States further engaged to accelerate the efforts to achieve the new Decade of Action for Road Safety, it is urgent to act together to achieve the goal of halving the number of the victims on the road by 2030.

    “Road crashes are not a fatality. This is why this exhibition on road safety at the Palais des Nations is important for raising awareness about the risk factors on the road. It also demonstrates the importance of building a global partnership for achieving road safety SDG targets,” the Special Envoy noted.

     

    Make a Safety Statement

    The UN Global Campaign for Road Safety – #MakeASafetyStatement, in partnership with JCDecaux, is part of UN efforts to raise public awareness of life-saving initiatives on the road. By the end of 2025, the campaign will appear on billboards and in public places in 80 countries, thanks to a global partnership with JCDecaux. It will be broadcast in about 1,000 towns and cities in 30 languages.

    Under the slogan #MakeASafetyStatement, the campaign brings together celebrities worldwide, such as Patrick Dempsey, Michelle Yeoh, Charles Leclerc, Didier Drogba, Teddy Riner, Kylie Minogue, Mick Schumacher or Naomi Campbell, to encourage users to adopt simple but effective rules to keep their roads safe. Olympic athletes also joined the campaign, thanks to the support of the International Olympic Committee (IOC).

    With making walking and cycling safe in the focus of the 8th UN road safety week, the Office of the Special Envoy has strengthened its collaboration with the International Union of Cyclists (UCI), thanks to the participation of Tadej Pogačar who is one of the champions of the MakeASafetyStatement campaign.

    Towards zero victims on the road in Switzerland

    According to the Swiss Federal Roads Office, road crashes caused 250 deaths in Switzerland in 2024, the highest figure since 2015. There were 47 deaths among motorcyclists with an increase among young people, 25 on electric bicycles, 20 among “conventional” cyclists, and 48 among pedestrians, the majority of whom were outside of pedestrian crossings.

    Of the total, alcohol was the suspected primary cause in 34 cases (+31% year-on-year), ahead of speeding, with 33 cases, and then inattention or distraction.  Among deaths in passenger car accidents, the sharpest increase was observed among those aged 25 to 34 and those aged 75 and over.

    However, the number of people seriously injured decreased. Switzerland is one of the countries that has invested in road safety with zero tolerance, and has achieved a road fatality rate of 2 per 100,000 inhabitants (compared to 6.5/100,000 in Europe and 19.5/100,00 in Africa (WHO 2021). The country can therefore show good practices that could be implemented in other countries.

    Risk factors that are often neglected                                                                           

    Only 7 countries in the world have laws that comply with WHO best practices for all the risk factors (France, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Luxembourg, Portugal, Sweden) on speeding, driving under the influence or distracted driving, use of UN-standard motorbike helmets, and use of seatbelts and child restraints as regulated by UNECE.

    For example, safety-belts remain the best vehicle safety device to protect passengers from being severely injured in a crash or being ejected from the vehicle.  Over the past several decades regulation and consumer demand have led to increasingly safe cars in higher income countries, in turn leading to fewer road fatalities. For example, in the UNECE region, total road fatalities decreased by 25% in between 2000 and 2010, and by 15% in the period 2010-2019. In particular, this drop was more significant among car occupants (UNECE 2024).

    Malaysia supports the UN Decade of Action for Road Safety

    One study by the Malaysian Institute of Road Safety Research (MIROS) revealed that many young riders in Malaysia begin as early as the age of 12, often without licenses or proper training. These insights have helped Malaysia shape more targeted interventions, because when we understand the behaviour, we are better positioned to implement solutions that are both smart and achievable.

    In support of this, Malaysia continues to prioritise helmet use among young motorcyclists. In addition to education and awareness campaigns in schools and rural areas, Malaysia introduced a Helmet Exchange Programme that allows riders to swap old or non-compliant helmets for new, safety-certified ones. This effort is vital as motorcyclists account for over 60% of road traffic fatalities in Malaysia, with the highest risk group being those aged 16 to 20. By improving access, building awareness, and fostering behavioural change, we aim to instill a culture of safety from early age.

    Malaysia firmly embraces the vision of the UN Decade of Action, to reduce road traffic fatalities by 50% by 2030. To this end, Malaysia continues to work closely with key road safety stakeholders, including the WHO.

     

    Learn more about the programme of the exhibition here.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Lifesaving humanitarian supply route cut in South Sudan, leaving malnourished children at risk

    Source: World Food Programme

    Juba – More than 60,000 malnourished children in South Sudan’s Upper Nile state are at risk of plunging deeper into malnutrition as treatment supplies run critically low and resupply efforts are hampered, the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) and UNICEF warned today.

    Intensified fighting along the White Nile river has meant no humanitarian supplies have reached the area in almost a month. The river is the main humanitarian supply corridor into Upper Nile.

    Upper Nile state has some of the highest rates of malnutrition in South Sudan, with over 300,000 children affected by moderate or severe malnutrition in the past year. As the rainy season progresses and conflict continues to displace families, the spread of waterborne diseases and increased food insecurity is expected to contribute to a rise in the number of malnourished children. 

    Without urgent access and resupply of vital assistance, WFP and UNICEF expect to exhaust nutrition supplies to treat moderate and severe cases of malnutrition by the end of May. This will bring life-saving treatment programmes across the state to a standstill, impacting tens of thousands of children undergoing treatment. 

    In mid-April, barges carrying 1,000 metric tonnes of food and nutrition supplies bound for Upper Nile state were forced to return due to insecurity. Almost 3,000 additional metric tonnes are on standby in Bor – a humanitarian cargo hub along the Nile River – ready for delivery as soon as conditions allow.

    “Children are already the first to suffer during emergencies, if we can’t get nutrition supplies through, we are likely to see escalating malnutrition in areas already at breaking point,” said Mary-Ellen McGroarty, WFP Representative in South Sudan. “This is already one of the most food-insecure regions in South Sudan with extremely high rates of malnutrition, in these situations every day makes a difference for a malnourished child in need of life-saving treatment.”

    Due to security concerns and the high value of nutrition supplies, WFP and UNICEF are unable to preposition stock in insecure areas as doing so would leave health facilities and warehouses increasingly vulnerable to looting. Already, in Upper Nile, almost 2,000 cartons of life-saving nutrition supplies (around 26 metric tonnes) have been looted since the onset of the conflict, robbing around 1,900 children of their only chance of treatment and recovery.

    “We have reluctantly taken the unprecedented step of holding back supplies for fear that they will not reach the children that so desperately need them, due to the ongoing fighting, looting and disruption of the river route,” UNICEF’s OIC Representative, Obia Achieng. “If this continues, we are in danger of simply running out of supplies in counties across the state by the end of May 2025, with potentially catastrophic results for the youngest, most vulnerable children,” Achieng added.

    WFP and UNICEF warn that without an urgent, safe resumption of deliveries, children across Upper Nile will face the devastating consequences of interrupted treatment—reversing hard-won gains in the fight against malnutrition and putting the lives of the youngest and most vulnerable at even greater risk.

    #                                     #                              #

    The United Nations World Food Programme is the world’s largest humanitarian organization, saving lives in emergencies and using food assistance to build a pathway to peace, stability and prosperity for people recovering from conflict, disasters and the impact of climate change.

    UNICEF promotes the rights and wellbeing of every child, in everything we do. Together with our partners, we work in 190 countries and territories to translate that commitment into practical action, focusing special effort on reaching the most vulnerable and excluded children, to the benefit of all children, everywhere.

    Follow us on Twitter @wfp_SouthSudan @unicefssudan

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Center for Advanced Preparedness and Threat Response Simulation (CAPTRS)

    Source: UNISDR Disaster Risk Reduction

    Mission

    Center for Advanced Preparedness and Threat Response Simulation (CAPTRS) is a 501c3 setting a new standard. It offers a portfolio of games are research-based and focus on the cognitive level in addition to the strategic, operational, and tactical levels. CAPTRS designs games for a wide range of players––public health and healthcare professionals, scientists and engineers, elected officials, community and industry leaders––and to bolster preparedness across all stages in the decision cycle.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: WRRC Webinar: Enhancing National Systems for Assessing Loss and Damage

    Source: UNISDR Disaster Risk Reduction

    This webinar, a precursor to the World Resilient Recovery Conference (WRRC), aims to explore these critical practical and policy challenges in post-disaster loss and damage assessments while highlighting emerging solutions that can ensure that countries are better prepared to assess, quantify, and respond to disaster-induced losses in an increasingly risk-prone world.

    This webinar is jointly organized by the United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction (UNDRR), the Government of India and the Gorvernment of the Philippines.

    Background

    In recent decades, natural hazards—including climate-induced disasters—have become increasingly frequent and severe, causing immense human and economic devastation and significantly hindering sustainable development. In 2023 alone, 399 disasters claimed over 86,000 lives, affected 93.1 million people, and caused economic losses of approximately USD 202.7 billion. 

    These alarming figures underscore the urgent necessity for robust, accurate, and timely loss and damage assessment mechanisms to facilitate effective recovery and secure timely financial support. The varied nature of risks faced by countries also underscores the importance of a whole-of-society, multi-hazard risk approach that bridges disaster risk reduction and climate change adaptation and accounts for non-economic losses. 

    However, several systemic barriers impede countries’ ability to conduct comprehensive loss and damage assessments. Methodological inconsistencies and lack of international standardization frequently lead to conflicting loss estimates. Data gaps and insufficient baseline information further complicate accurate loss evaluations. Limited technical capacities and fragmented institutional coordination exacerbate delays. Additionally, significant challenges remain in quantifying non-economic losses. 

    At the same time, emerging technologies and innovative policy approaches present promising solutions. Advanced geospatial technologies, including satellite imagery, drones, and AI-based analytics, have rapidly enhanced assessment capabilities. The establishment of the Fund for Responding to Loss and Damage (FRLD) at COP28 provides a significant opportunity for developing countries. International initiatives such as the Santiago Network or the International Recovery Platform (IRP) are also playing a critical role in strengthening national capacities. 

    Session objectives

    1. Diagnose current bottlenecks: Pinpoint the methodological, institutional and data-related challenges that delay or distort post-disaster loss-and-damage assessments.
    2. Exchange practical lessons: Share concrete experiences from recent disasters—what worked, what did not—and distil transferrable practices.
    3. Showcase emerging solutions that can close critical assessment gaps.
    4. Highlight linkages to regional and global mechanisms of support for countries.
    5. Suggest priority actions that integrate solutions, build technical capacity and institutionalise assessments.

    Speakers

    • Mr. S K Jindal, Additional Secretary, Disaster Management Division, Ministry of Home Affairs, India
    • Ms. Noralene M. Uy, Assistant Secretary for Policy, Planning and Foreign-Assisted and Special Projects, Department of Environment and Natural Resources, Government of the Philippines

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Secretary-General’s remarks at the Welcome Dinner hosted by Their Majesties The King and Queen of Denmark [as delivered]

    Source: United Nations secretary general

    Let me begin by extending my deepest gratitude to our hosts – Your Majesties King Frederik and Queen Mary – for your warm hospitality.
     
    And thank you for choosing such a spectacular, symbolic setting.
     
    This magnificent Kronborg Castle is much more than the inspiration for Shakespeare’s Hamlet.
     
    But around the world, the lessons of that story echo around us.
     
    The dangers of unchecked power and the consequences of division.
     

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: 7 May 2025 Departmental update Global Disability Summit marks pivotal moment in advancing health for all

    Source: World Health Organisation

    Inclusion must be a right and it should not be negotiable. WHO’s position starts from that and WHO has been working on disability for many years.

    Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus / WHO Director-General

    Leaders, advocates and experts from across the globe gathered in Berlin from 2–3 April 2025 for the Global Disability Summit to discuss the critical role that disability inclusion plays in building a more sustainable future.

    The Summit, organized by the Governments of Germany and Jordan in collaboration with the International Disability Alliance, marked a pivotal moment in global health efforts to advance health equity for all.

    The World Health Organization (WHO) was well represented at the Summit, as demonstrated by the participation of Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO Director-General, and Darryl Barrett, Technical Lead of the WHO Disability Programme.

    Key outcomes from the Summit

    • Announcement of a WHO Global Initiative on Health Equity for Persons with Disabilities

    Dr Tedros announced the launch of a WHO Global Initiative on Health Equity for Persons with Disabilities. The Initiative will act as an essential mechanism to coordinate and prioritize collaborative efforts for better health for persons with disabilities. It will transform health systems and guide countries in developing and implementing policies that prioritize their health needs.

    • Strategic discussions to drive progress

    The Summit enabled crucial discussions between WHO and various partners, especially persons with disabilities and their representative organizations, on the most efficient ways to mainstream disability inclusion in health practices and systems. Partners proposed innovative strategies to leverage resources, expertise and networks to drive progress in health equity for persons with disabilities. The insights gained from the discussions will shape the objectives and structure of the global initiative, ensuring it effectively addresses the needs of persons with disabilities.

    • High-level commitments

    The Summit concluded with over 800 commitments made by countries and partners at all levels to promote disability inclusion. WHO endorsed the Amman-Berlin Declaration on Global Disability Inclusion and will continue to work with governments, organizations and stakeholders to advance disability inclusion in international development and humanitarian action. The health-related commitments, published on the Summit’s website, will serve as a roadmap to create more inclusive health systems.

    The way forward

    The Summit was a powerful platform that catalysed an unprecedented movement for a more inclusive health sector driven by and for persons with disabilities.

    WHO will build on the conversations initiated with disability advocates and health sector stakeholders, and work actively towards the launch of the global initiative on health equity for persons with disabilities.

    Dr Tedros added, “Universal health coverage cannot happen without including the 1.3 billion [persons with disabilities globally]. All countries have to mainstream inclusion in their policies. So that’s what we’re pushing for, and we will continue to do our best.”

    To receive regular updates on WHO’s activities to advance disability inclusion in health systems, subscribe to the WHO Disability Programme Newsletter.

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    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: JFSQ introduction and peer exchange workshop

    Source: United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

    This online workshop (English only) is intended for Joint Forest Sector Questionnaire (JFSQ) national correspondents (focal points), as well as members of the Team of Specialists on Forest Products and Wood Energy Statistics who are interested in participating in a peer exchange programme.

    First, UNECE and Eurostat will present an introduction to the JFSQ, including updates this year. The ensuing discussion provides and opportunity for both new and existing JFSQ national correspondents to raise questions.

    The remainder of the workshop will launch a peer exchange program, organized by the Team of Specialists on Forest Products and Wood Energy Statistics, and intended to identify opportunities for experienced JFSQ correspondents to mentor peers, and also to facilitate technical exchange among experts and correspondents on topics such as methods of data collection and compilation at the national level for JFSQ reporting.

    Following the meeting, JFSQ correspondents will be matched with peers for mentorship and exchange. To participate in the peer matching, interested correspondents (and experts who may provide support) are requested to complete the following form by May 20: JFSQ Introduction and Peer Exchange Workshop

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Thriving urban forests in dry climates: Innovative water management for resilience

    Source: United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

    The webinar Thriving Urban Forests in Dry Climates: Innovative Water Management for Resilience, will focus on innovative solutions for addressing water scarcity in urban forests. Highlighting successful case studies from cities like Cuenca (Ecuador), Ouagadougou (Burkina Faso), and the work of SIWI’s LoCoFoRest initiative, the discussion will explore practical water management practices that help urban forests thrive in water-scarce environments. With the increasing urgency of climate change, this session aims to foster a collaborative, solution-oriented dialogue to build sustainable and resilient urban landscapes.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: 7 May 2025 Departmental update Low-cost, quality-assured HIV tests to sustain access to life-saving services

    Source: World Health Organisation

    HIV testing is an essential health service and is the critical gateway to both prevention and treatment. With several countries facing significant financial uncertainty, it is urgent for countries to adopt pragmatic cost-saving measures. By prioritizing low-cost and effective differentiated HIV testing solutions, countries can ensure continuity of services for people living with HIV on life-saving treatment and protect hard-won public health gains.

    To adapt to this new environment, WHO encourages countries to adopt low-cost WHO pre-qualified HIV rapid tests as the first test in their testing strategy and update their national algorithms accordingly. This also applies to the HIV syphilis dual tests in antenatal care. Adopting a high quality and low-cost first test in a national HIV testing algorithm will result in an immediate and substantial reduction in testing costs for countries. Countries can refer to WHO’s Toolkit to optimize HIV testing algorithms to select a listed low-cost product and to be able to rapidly transition their testing programmes. 

    WHO recommends flexible algorithms and supports verification studies during or after the algorithm transition, using multiple WHO prequalified products as the first test. 

    For additional savings, WHO urges countries to adopt low-cost and quality-assured HIV self-tests (blood or oral). Programmes with limited health workers and testing capacity may also consider using HIV self-tests as an alternative first test, especially in contexts where gaps in maintaining service delivery remain. Further guidance on using HIV self-tests can be found in the 2024 WHO Consolidated guidelines on differentiated HIV testing service. This includes a recommendation on facility-based self-testing. It also aims to help countries sustain and expand HIV testing coverage amid constrained budgets.  

    “The global HIV response and epidemic control is at risk,” said Dr Meg Doherty, Director of WHO Global HIV, Hepatitis and STI Programmes. “We must continue to do everything we can to support countries in delivering life-saving HIV services. Providing countries flexibility and shifting to low-cost, quality-assured HIV rapid tests  , dual HIV/syphilis and self-tests will ensure impact, quality and allow more resources to reach people living with HIV and prevent new infections.”

    WHO can support countries to expedite product availability in countries, such as through waivers to expedite regulatory approvals, which are needed to make this rapid transition. Existing national regulatory pathways can also help fast-track the introduction and registration of new products.

    There is a wide selection of low-cost, WHO-prequalified HIV tests available. Countries can use the WHO diagnostic catalogue and product selection tool to review these options and optimize their national testing strategies. “This guidance is only possible thanks to   WHO’s Prequalification (PQ) Programme, which ensures that quality-assured diagnostics are accessible and affordable for all low- and middle-income countries,” said Dr Rogerio Gaspar, Director of WHO Department of Regulation and Prequalification. 

    The WHO PQ Programme evaluates HIV in vitro diagnostics against international standards of quality, safety and performance. It plays a crucial role in ensuring that countries can provide high-quality diagnosis, effective prevention, and access to treatment for those who need it.

    Engagement with procurers and those hosting pooled procurement mechanisms is critical as well. 

    “The Global Fund welcomes this important guidance from the World Health Organization, which will help countries sustain life-saving HIV services,” said Marijke Wijnroks, the Global Fund’s Head of Strategic Investment and Impact. “We look forward to working with countries to support adoption and implementation of this guidance to both minimize the costs of HIV tests and ensure sustained provision and access to HIV testing services.”

    With support from global partners,  WHO continues to work to secure access to HIV diagnostics in all countries and across all settings to ensure life-saving services continue and no one is left behind.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: WFP welcomes €1.5 million from the European Union to support Ukrainian refugees and strengthen Moldova’s national social protection system

    Source: World Food Programme

    CHIȘINĂU – The United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) has welcomed a generous contribution of €1.5 million from the European Union. This crucial humanitarian funding will enable WFP to continue providing vital assistance to Ukrainian refugees in the Refugee Accommodation Centres through hot meals provision, and to refugee host families through cash assistance. The contribution will also support efforts to strengthen the country’s national social protection system to better assist the most vulnerable.

    Moldova continues to experience significant impacts due to the war in Ukraine. Since 2022, almost 2 million Ukrainians have crossed into the country. Currently, over 127,000 remain, accounting for around 5% of Moldova’s total population – the highest Ukrainian refugee population per capita in the world.

    With this new EU contribution, WFP will continue to deliver hot meals in Refugee Accommodation Centres (RACs) across the country and to Ukrainian refugees at border crossings. In addition, WFP will offer cash assistance to Moldovan households hosting Ukrainian refugees.

    The funding will also be directed towards strengthening Moldova’s national social protection system, helping to support refugee integration and social cohesion with host communities, and building the government’s capacity to deliver Emergency Cash Transfers to those impacted by disasters and crises. 

    WFP plays a crucial coordinating role in social protection efforts within the Humanitarian-Development-Peace (HDP) Nexus in Moldova, fostering strong synergies and added value. By co-leading technical working groups, such as the EU Nexus Workshop series, WFP is effectively positioned to support and advance social assistance reforms in close collaboration with the Government, aligning with the EU’s priorities for social protection.

    “The war in Ukraine has forced millions to flee their homes. Faced with immense challenges, refugees need our unwavering support. That’s why the EU remains committed to providing aid, protection, and long-term assistance to help them rebuild their lives, also outside their country,” said Marianna Franco, the Head of Office for EU Humanitarian Aid in Ukraine and Moldova.

    “As WFP continues to meet urgent humanitarian needs, the EU’s contribution is instrumental in enabling WFP’s shift towards approaches to sustainable social protection systems that support and benefit both refugees and vulnerable Moldovans,” said Katrien Ghoos, WFP Representative and Country Director in Moldova.

    “This contribution makes a difference in addressing immediate needs and reinforces national social protection systems and government capacities for long-term resilience and impact,” she added. 

    Since the onset of the Ukrainian refugee crisis in 2022, WFP has provided significant support to vulnerable Ukrainian refugees in Moldova. This includes the provision of 6.2 million hot meals in Refugee Accommodation Centres (RACs) across the country. Over the last three years, the European Union has been a key supporter of these and other WFP activities in Moldova. Thanks to its generous contributions, alongside support from other donors, WFP has also provided cash assistance to more than 84,000 Moldovans hosting refugees.

     

     #                       #                      #

    The United Nations World Food Programme is the world’s largest humanitarian organization saving lives in emergencies and using food assistance to build a pathway to peace, stability and prosperity for people recovering from conflict, disasters and the impact of climate change.

    Follow us on X (formerly Twitter) via @wfp_media 

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  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Udemy

    Source: UNISDR Disaster Risk Reduction

    Mission

    Udemy’s mission is to provide flexible, effective skill development to empower organizations and individuals. Udemy is a learning platform that helps learners prepare for the path ahead — wherever it leads. Its curated collection of business and technical courses help companies, governments, and nonprofits go further by placing learning at the center of their strategies.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: 5 May 2025 Building Resilience Through Preparedness: Scaling Up Mental Health and Psychosocial Support in Bangladesh

    Source: World Health Organisation

    From 2–4 December, WHO and UNHCR co-organized a three-day inter-agency workshop in Cox’s Bazar focused on operationalizing MHPSS preparedness as part of disaster risk management. This workshop was part of broader efforts under the WHO Special Initiative for Mental Health (SIMH) to expand sustainable mental health services in Bangladesh. More than 50 participants from across government and the humanitarian and development sectors joined the workshop. The MHPSS Ready training package aims to strengthen the capacity to manage risks to mental health and ensure timely and effective mental health and psychosocial support before, during and after emergencies. 

    To further support implementation, WHO and partners piloted the forthcoming MHPSS Preparedness Assessment Toolkit, using the toolkit’s capacity checklist to assess MHPSS readiness in SIMH-supported districts and in Cox’s Bazar refugee camps. To further assess readiness, two community risks and capacities focus group discussions were held in Cox’s Bazar to gather feedback from adults living in the refugee camps. Visits to health centres and community discussions further enriched findings, with more district-level assessments planned for 2025.

    Building on these activities,, a national stakeholder workshop on MHPSS preparedness was also held on 10 December in Dhaka. The workshop brought together representatives from the National Institute of Mental Health, NGOs, and UN agencies to define key challenges and next steps. Among the priorities identified were expanding community-based mental health systems, strengthening multisectoral coordination, and embedding MHPSS within national emergency and disaster management planning and structures.

    These initial steps mark important progress in strengthening MHPSS preparedness in Bangladesh. Through investment in coordination, capacity, and data, the country is moving toward more resilient systems. Strengthening MHPSS is  essential to protecting population well-being during emergencies, and boosting universal health coverage

    For more information, please contact Hasina Momotaz (momotazh@who.int) and Dr Brandon Gray (grayb@who.int

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  • MIL-OSI United Nations: 6 May 2025 Departmental update Indigenous leadership and views must shape new Global Health Action Plan

    Source: World Health Organisation

    Credit: WHO/Sergio Abarca Fuente

    From left to right: Pauliina Nykanen-Rettaroli, Senior Technical Lead on Human Rights, WHO; Geoffrey Roth, Member of the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues (UNPFII); Binota Moy Dhamai, Member of the Expert Mechanism on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (EMRIP); Emma Rawson Te-Patu, President of the World Federation of Public Health Associations

    At an interactive side event during the 24th Session of the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues (UNPFII), Indigenous leaders, health experts and advocates gathered to explore the guiding principles and priority areas for actions that will shape the Global Plan of Action (GPA) for the health of Indigenous Peoples. Co-hosted by the World Health Organization (WHO) and the Permanent Mission of Brazil, the event marked a step in advancing World Health Assembly Resolution 76.16, which calls for stronger rights-based action to address health disparities faced by Indigenous Peoples worldwide. Moderated by Geoffrey Roth (Lakota, Standing Rock and Member of the UNPFII), speakers and participants at the event emphasized that the GPA must be developed with Indigenous Peoples, not for them, and must reflect Indigenous conceptualizations of health, considering self-determination, culturally grounded healing systems and ancestral knowledge.

    A major theme of the event was the need for Indigenous leadership to guide the design, implementation and monitoring of the Global Plan, with speakers emphasizing that Indigenous Peoples, including those at the grassroots level, must be meaningfully involved. “Access means a meaningful and effective participation of Indigenous Peoples, including in this WHO global action plan,” said Binota Moy Dhamai, member of the Expert Mechanism on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (EMRIP). “Their right to self-determination, protection of their land and territory, recognition of knowledge systems on traditional medicine, and Indigenous-led governance are crucial for maintaining Indigenous Peoples’ health.” Some concerns were raised about access to global mechanisms, which are often not user friendly and can exclude entire communities of people. Many highlighted the urgent need for Indigenous Peoples to be included in key discussions.

    Discussions also emphasized that Indigenous Peoples’ full conceptualizations of health, including the holistic connection rooted in balance with the land, spirit and communities, must be central to the GPA. “As an Indigenous woman, I don’t speak about myself first but about my land, my place, my ancestors,” said Emma Rawson Te-Patu, President of the World Federation of Public Health Associations. Such a holistic conceptualization includes addressing mental health concerns in ways that are community-informed and safeguard Indigenous medicinal knowledge and practices. It also involves the protection and promotion of traditional medicine systems as a whole; the safeguarding of Indigenous lands and languages; and the centring and embedding of ancestral knowledge into universal health coverage (UHC) and climate resilience strategies. Health systems must acknowledge not only individuals but also their ancestors, lands and communities as essential sources of healing and knowledge.

    Speakers called for practical collaboration across UN agencies and international frameworks to avoid fragmentation. WHO was urged to coordinate closely with related initiatives on biodiversity, traditional medicine and knowledge, climate change and desertification. WHO’s Global Traditional Medicine Centre was identified as an important mechanism to support the delivery of the Global Plan.

    Another strong recommendation was the establishment of a high-level Indigenous advisory body to guide and oversee the Plan’s development and implementation. Such a body would safeguard and promote human rights-based approaches to health, informed consent and sustainable Indigenous-led community funding mechanisms in implementing and monitoring the GPA.

    This event marked a clear call to move beyond dialogue and toward broader and sustained accountable partnerships that centre Indigenous voices in shaping their own health and well-being. It also emphasized the need for global and country health strategies to honour Indigenous knowledge and resilience. As Geoffrey Roth noted in his opening remarks, “We have the wisdom. We have the solutions. What we need now is sustained commitment.”

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  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Nearly 110,000 Afghans Returned from Pakistan in a Month; IOM Seeks Urgent Funding

    Source: International Organization for Migration (IOM)

    Geneva/Kabul, 6 May 2025 – Amid a sharp increase in the number of Afghan nationals returning from Pakistan – including 109,891 between 3 April and 3 May – the International Organization for Migration (IOM) and partners today launched an appeal to scale up urgently needed support at border and neighbouring areas, where dire conditions and funding shortfalls are compounding risks for the most vulnerable. 

    This appeal for additional funding by the IOM-led Border Consortium in Afghanistan seeks to address the needs of between 600,000 and 1.5 million Afghan returnees – most of whom are undocumented – driven by the second phase of Pakistan’s Illegal Foreigners Repatriation Plan (IFRP), which is expected to continue triggering large-scale returns in the coming months.  

    “Most of the people returning to Afghanistan are in a state of acute vulnerability, having been forced to leave behind their homes, possessions, and jobs. The most vulnerable of them, especially women and girls, are often separated from their families and they don’t have access to shelter and other essential services,” said Ugochi Daniels, IOM Deputy Director General for Operations. “At this most fragile time, we appeal to the international community to help us meet these urgent humanitarian needs.” 

    In April, an average of 3,000 people per day returned through key border crossings in Nangarhar and Kandahar provinces, according to the latest IOM data. Women and children make up most of these crossings, which until that month were averaging just 100 per day.  

    Equally alarming is the condition of deportees from Iran. Between January and April, IOM recorded over 265,000 undocumented Afghan returnees – with 75 per cent forcibly returned. 

    IOM and its partners also reiterated a call for all countries to immediately halt the forced returns of Afghans until conditions are in place to ensure safe and dignified returns and reintegration, regardless of a person’s immigration status. 

    Over 48,000 returnees have received critical support at IOM-run reception centres and two transit facilities. After screening, IOM and partners provide food, temporary shelter, transport, healthcare, and psychosocial support – especially for vulnerable groups like women and children. 

    However, the current conditions in Afghanistan make absorbing the rising number of returnees difficult, as communities are already strained by limited resources and weakened infrastructure. Sharp reductions in funding compound these difficulties, leaving local systems under severe pressure as the influx grows, threatening access to essential services for both returnees and host populations alike. 

    “As the lead agency of the border consortium of humanitarian partners, IOM is prepared to ramp up its response and expand operations at critical entry points. However, without immediate additional funding, efforts to meet the growing demand and support vulnerable returnees and receiving communities will remain severely constrained,” said DDG Daniels.

     

    For more information, please contact IOM Media Centre  

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  • MIL-OSI United Nations: 6 May 2025 Departmental update Working together to make asthma a global health priority

    Source: World Health Organisation

    To mark World Asthma Day 2025, the Global Asthma Network (GAN) launches the Global Asthma Report 2025: Patient Stories, a compelling collection of stories from people living with asthma around the world. The report shines a spotlight on the daily challenges individuals face – from delayed diagnoses to unaffordable or unavailable inhaled medicines – as well as the life-changing benefits of timely and effective treatment.  

    More than 250 million people worldwide are living with asthma – a significant global health burden. This year’s World Asthma Day theme, “Make inhaled treatments accessible for all,” reinforces the urgency of ensuring universal access to affordable, quality-assured asthma medicines. Despite decades of evidence showing that inhaled treatments — including bronchodilators and inhaled corticosteroids — reduce symptoms, improve quality of life, and prevent deaths, access remains inadequate in many low- and middle-income countries.

    Asthma inhalers are included in the WHO Model List of Essential Medicines, are core medicines in the WHO package of essential noncommunicable disease (NCD) interventions for primary health care, and are included in the WHO “Best Buys” for NCDs.

    The Forum of International Respiratory Societies (FIRS) is launching a campaign to raise awareness of these  gaps and is calling on Heads of State and global health leaders to invest in solutions that make inhaled treatments available to everyone who needs them.

    The upcoming fourth United Nations High-Level Meeting on NCDs, to be held in September 2025, offers a pivotal moment for Heads of State and Government, UN partners, Ministers of Health, civil society and donors to strengthen existing commitments to reduce premature mortality from NCDs by one third by 2030.

    “By prioritizing equitable access to medicines and strengthening primary healthcare systems, countries can not only meet global NCD targets but also enjoy significant economic and social returns,” said José Luis Castro, WHO Director General’s Special Envoy for Chronic Respiratory Diseases. “Improved asthma care leads to better health outcomes, enhanced education performance, and increased participation in the labour market.”

    WHO continues to lead global efforts to address chronic respiratory diseases.  Through its Global Alliance against Chronic Respiratory Diseases (GARD), WHO works with partners such as FIRS, GAN and the Global Initiative for Asthma (GINA), to strengthen global advocacy and technical support for countries.

    “The work of our longstanding, valued partners is vital,” said Dr Sarah Rylance, technical lead for chronic respiratory diseases at WHO. “Together, we are amplifying critical evidence-based messages and driving progress to ensure that every person with asthma – no matter where they live – can breathe freely.”

    WHO is currently updating the guidance on the diagnosis and management of asthma in primary care. Up-to-date, evidence-based global recommendations are essential to support countries to prioritise effective asthma treatment within their national health system planning and policy development. 

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  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Greater attention to boreal forests needed, says UN Study

    Source: United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

    Representing 27% of all forests worldwide, boreal forests are the planet’s terrestrial “second lung” after tropical forests. Encircling the North Pole, they span North America, Europe, and Asia, playing a vital role in global carbon sequestration and storage, biodiversity, and supporting societies and economies. 

    Despite their importance, boreal forests do not receive the same visibility and attention among policymakers and the public as their tropical forest counterparts. A new study published by the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe (UNECE), presented today at the United Nations Forum on Forests in New York, highlights the urgent need to increase the understanding of this global “treasure trove” and to safeguard its important contributions.  

    The comprehensive study on boreal forests and accompanying series of national overviews (for Canada, Finland, Norway, Russian Federation, Sweden, USA) finds that despite the importance of the boreal biome, there are significant gaps in knowledge about its forests, their role in sustainable development, and their future. This can be attributed to fragmented research, based on national, site-specific conditions, and the lack of a harmonized and agreed definition and monitoring framework across the boreal region. 

    Call for Action 

    The study highlights the need to place greater focus on boreal forests in global discussions on sustainable development, biodiversity conservation, sustainability indicators and climate change adaptation and mitigation.  

    A commonly agreed definition of boreal forests would help to delineate the area they occupy as a precondition for a consistent monitoring of the boreal forest biome. This could be achieved through the development of a set of dedicated criteria and indicators for monitoring long-term effects of forest management activities, natural and human-caused landscape disturbance, as well as climate change, including fires and insect infestations. 

    Such assessment instruments, resulting from the joint efforts of countries with boreal forests, would generate evidence on the state of the biome for improved policymaking for the sustainable management of boreal forests and help raise their overall profile.  

    The UNECE Committee on Forests and the Forest Industry offers a platform and tools to facilitate the exchange of information and cooperation in this regard. 

    Key Facts

    • Carbon storage: These forests contain about 32% of global terrestrial carbon stocks, with boreal soils holding vast amounts of carbon, significantly impacting atmospheric carbon levels. 

    • Economic importance: They contribute substantially to sustainable livelihoods, including to rural, remote and Indigenous communities, and economic growth, providing 37% of the world’s stock of growing timber. Activities such as berry or mushroom picking, hunting, and recreation/tourism also make important contributions. 

    • Rising threats: Boreal forests face increasing threats from climate change, including wildfires, pest outbreaks, and thawing permafrost. 

    Boreal forests are characterized by short, moist, and moderately warm summers and long, cold, and dry winters. Their flora consists mostly of cold-tolerant evergreen conifer trees, such as spruce, larch, pine and fir, with some broadleaf species such as birch, poplar and alder. The world’s boreal regions are among the least densely populated on earth. 

    Boreal forests contain approximately 48% of global primary forests and are vital for the conservation of biodiversity and climate regulation. They play an important role in global carbon sequestration and storage, and therefore, are key to climate change mitigation. In addition to providing significant ecosystem services, for example, the protection of freshwater resources, boreal forests play a substantial role in contributing to the sustainable economic development of countries in the boreal zone, and provide a sustainable supply of wood and energy to world markets. 

    Boreal forests, like other forest biomes, are important to global goals such as the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) 8, 12, 13 and 15, the six Global Forest Goals and the Targets of the United Nations Strategic Plan for Forests 2030. 

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  • MIL-OSI United Nations: 6 May 2025 News release Health inequities are shortening lives by decades

    Source: World Health Organisation

    A global report published by the World Health Organization (WHO) highlights that the underlying causes of ill health often stem from factors beyond the health sector, such as lack of quality housing, education and job opportunities.

    The new World report on social determinants of health equity shows that such determinants can be responsible for a dramatic reduction of healthy life expectancy – sometimes by decades – in high- and low-income countries alike. For example, people in the country with the lowest life expectancy will, on average, live 33 years shorter than those born in the country with the highest life expectancy. The social determinants of health equity can influence people’s health outcomes more than genetic influences or access to health care.

    “Our world is an unequal one. Where we are born, grow, live, work and age significantly influences our health and well-being,” said WHO Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus. “But change for the better is possible. This world report illustrates the importance of addressing the interlinked social determinants and provides evidence-based strategies and policy recommendations to help countries improve health outcomes for all.”

    The report underscores that inequities in health are closely linked to degrees of social disadvantage and levels of discrimination. Health follows a social gradient whereby the more deprived the area in which people live, the lower their incomes are and they have fewer years of education, poorer health, with less number of healthy years to live. These inequities are exacerbated in populations that face discrimination and marginalization. One of the vivid examples is the fact that Indigenous Peoples have lower life expectancy than non-Indigenous Peoples in high- or low-income countries alike.

    Social injustice driving inequities

    The World report on social determinants of health equity is the first of its kind published since 2008 when the WHO Commission on Social Determinants of Health released its final report laying out targets for 2040 for reducing gaps between and within countries in life expectancy, childhood and maternal mortality. The 2025 world report, shows that these targets are likely to be missed.

    Although data is scarce, there is sufficient evidence to show that health inequities within countries are often widening. WHO data cites that children born in poorer countries are 13 times more likely to die before the age of 5 than in wealthier countries. Modelling shows that the lives of 1.8 million children annually could be saved by closing the gap and enhancing equity between the poorest and wealthiest sectors of the population within low- and-middle-income countries.

    The report shows that while there was a 40% decline in maternal mortality globally between 2000 and 2023, low- and lower-middle-income countries still account for 94% of maternal deaths.

    Women from disadvantaged groups are more likely to die from pregnancy-related causes. In many high-income countries, racial and ethnic inequities in maternal death rates persist, for example, in some areas Indigenous women were up to three times more likely to die during childbirth. There are also strong associations between higher levels of gender inequality, including child marriage, and higher maternal mortality rates.

    Breaking the cycle

    WHO emphasizes that measures to address income inequality, structural discrimination, conflict and climate disruptions are key to overcoming deep-seated health inequities. Climate change, for example, is estimated to push an additional 68–135 million people into extreme poverty over the next 5 years.

    Currently, 3.8 billion people worldwide are deprived of adequate social protection coverage, such as child/paid sick leave benefits, with direct and lasting impact on their health outcomes. High debt burdens have been crippling the capacity of governments to invest in these services, with the total value of interest payments made by the world’s 75 poorest countries increasing fourfold over the past decade.

    WHO calls for collective action from national and local governments and leaders within health, academia, research, civil society, alongside the private sector to:

    • address economic inequality and invest in social infrastructure and universal public services;
    • overcome structural discrimination and the determinants and impacts of conflicts, emergencies and forced migration;
    • manage the challenges and opportunities of climate action and the digital transformation to promote health equity co-benefits; and
    • promote governance arrangements that prioritize action on the social determinants of health equity, including maintaining cross-government policy platforms and strategies, allocating money, power and resources to the most local level where it can have greatest impact, and empowering community engagement and civil society.

    Editor’s note 

    In resolution WHA74.16 (2021), the Seventy-fourth World Health Assembly requested the WHO Director-General to prepare an updated report on the social determinants of health, their impact on health and health equity, progress made so far in addressing them, and recommendations for further action. The World report on social determinants of health equity provides an update to the conclusion of the WHO Commission on the Social Determinants of Health in 2008 which stated that “social injustice kills on a grand scale”.

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  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Nominations now open for the 2025 WIN DRR Leadership Awards

    Source: UNISDR Disaster Risk Reduction

    The nominations for the 2025 Women’s International Network for Disaster Risk Reduction (WIN DRR) Leadership Awards are now open! Nominate yourself or others by 20 June 2025 for:

    • The Rising Star Award (US$ 7,500): Granted to an individual woman who has demonstrated leadership potential early in her disaster risk reduction career.
    • The Excellence Award (US$ 10,000): Granted to an individual woman who has achieved exceptional professional success in disaster risk reduction. This award is sponsored by SM Prime Holdings.

    About

    The WIN DRR Leadership Awards celebrate and recognize women’s achievements in disaster risk reduction across the Asia-Pacific region. The awards are part of the United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction (UNDRR) flagship women’s leadership initiative, WIN DRR, supported by the Government of Australia.

    WIN DRR is a professional network to support women working in disaster risk reduction and is open to all. To join, please complete this form.

    The 2025 WIN DRR Leadership Awards will be presented as part of the UNDRR celebrations of the International Day for Disaster Risk Reduction in October 2025.

    Eligibility for the awards

    Nominations for the 2025 WIN DRR Leadership Awards are encouraged from across the WIN DRR network and the broader disaster risk reduction community. Individuals can nominate themselves or others by completing the nomination form (see link below) by 20 June 2025. Nominees must identify as women and be citizens or permanent residents of Asia-Pacific countries, who are working on disaster risk reduction across the Asia-Pacific region. For the purposes of the awards, those countries include: Afghanistan, Australia, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Brunei Darussalam, Cambodia, China, Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, Fiji, India, Indonesia, Iran (Islamic Republic of), Japan, Kiribati, Lao People’s Democratic Republic, Malaysia, Maldives, Marshall Islands, Micronesia (Federated States of), Mongolia, Myanmar, Nauru, Nepal, New Zealand, Pakistan, Palau, Papua New Guinea, Philippines, Republic of Korea, Samoa, Singapore, Solomon Islands, Sri Lanka, Thailand, Timor-Leste, Tonga, Tuvalu, Vanuatu and Viet Nam.

    People who are currently or who have previously worked as staff for UNDRR or the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) are not eligible for the awards, though they are able to nominate others. People who are currently contracted with UNDRR in any capacity (e.g. as an intern, consultant or UNV), and people who are working for organizations that are currently contracted or receiving a grant from UNDRR are also ineligible.

    Make your nominations here.

    If you have any questions regarding the awards, please contact [email protected].

    Another big congratulations to the 2024 WIN DRR Leadership Awards winners Maria Linibi and Robyn Mijares! You can read more on all the 2024 Excellence Award finalists here and the Rising Star Award finalists here.

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  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Secretary-General’s press encounter on India and Pakistan

    Source: United Nations secretary general

    Tensions between India and Pakistan are at their highest in years.
    I deeply respect and am profoundly grateful to the Government and people of both countries — and their significant contributions to the work of the United Nations, not least UN peacekeeping.
    And so it pains me to see relations reaching a boiling point. 
    I understand the raw feelings following the awful terror attack in Pahalgam on 22 April.  
    I once again strongly condemn that attack and extend my condolences to the families of the victims. 

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  • MIL-OSI United Nations: UNFPA Warns of Devastating Impact of Funding Cuts on Midwife Support in Crisis-Hit Countries

    Source: United Nations Population Fund

    NEW YORK, NY, 05 May, 2025 – Severe funding cuts are forcing UNFPA, the United Nations sexual and reproductive health agency, to dramatically scale back its support for midwives in crisis settings, jeopardizing the health and lives of pregnant women and newborns in some of the most fragile places on earth.

    In eight crisis-hit countries alone, UNFPA will only be able to fund 47% of the 3,521 midwives it intended to support in 2025. These include:

    Number of midwives UNFPA will be able to support out of the original target: 

    • Afghanistan: 565 out 974 midwives 
    • Bangladesh (Rohingya response): 241 out of 288 midwives 
    • Cameroon:  17 out of 49 midwives 
    • Central African Republic: Zero out of 22 midwives 
    • Mali: 88 out of 133 midwives 
    • Palestine:  63 out of 93 midwives 
    • Sudan: Zero out of 470 midwives
    • Yemen: 700 out of 1492 midwives 

    UNFPA’s midwifery support is also being cut back in Chad, Nigeria, Madagascar and Somalia due to US funding cuts. 

    “Midwives save lives. They come to the rescue in the direst of circumstances. When crisis strikes and health systems are shattered, they are a lifeline for pregnant women who have lost access to vital maternity services,” said Dr. Natalia Kanem, Executive Director of UNFPA.

    UNFPA’s support to midwives serving in humanitarian settings includes training, providing supplies and equipment; and in some cases a means of transport so they can operate mobile health clinics even in remote, dangerous areas. From delivering babies to supporting survivors of rape, midwives can deliver 90 percent of essential sexual, reproductive, maternal, and newborn health services. When these services are cut, the consequences are enormous. In Afghanistan alone, loss of support for 409 midwives will cut access to skilled care for an estimated half a million women. 

    Births do not stop in crises. But when crises cut pregnant women off from reproductive health care and emergency obstetric services, the risks skyrocket. Women are twice as likely to die in pregnancy or childbirth in crisis settings. 

    To help address this crisis and to ensure the availability of adequate well trained midwives in all settings, UNFPA and partners recently launched the Global Midwifery Accelerator, a coordinated initiative to scale up midwife-led care in countries with the highest maternal mortality rates and greatest needs. The Accelerator sets out a cost-effective roadmap to save lives and strengthen national health systems,  even in the most fragile contexts, and is already harnessing support from donors, but much more is needed.

    “Cutting funding for humanitarian midwifery services puts women and their babies in harm’s way,” said Dr Natalia Kanem. “We cannot fail midwives; we need to find ways to support their essential work.”

    About UNFPA:

    UNFPA is the United Nations sexual and reproductive health agency. Our mission is to deliver a world where every pregnancy is wanted, every childbirth is safe and every young person’s potential is fulfilled.

    Media Contact:

    New York, Anna Jefferys Jefferys@unfpa.org or media@unfpa.org

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  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Statement from IOM Spokesperson: IOM Chief Visit to Tunisia

    Source: International Organization for Migration (IOM)

    Geneva/ Tunis, 5 May 2025 – At the invitation of H.E. Mr. Mohamed Ali Nafti, Minister of Foreign Affairs, Migration and Tunisians Abroad, IOM Director General Ms Amy Pope arrived in Tunisia today to hold high-level meetings with Government officials and key partners to strengthen cooperation and support coordinated and effective approaches to address migration challenges and opportunities in the country. 

    During her visit, DG Pope will attend a thematic workshop on diaspora engagement taking place in the context of the Global Forum on Migration and Development (GFMD). The GFMD event, on 6 May, will focus on boosting diaspora engagement, attracting investment, retaining skilled talent, and supporting Tunisia’s youth. With over 15 per cent of Tunisians living abroad, primarily in Europe, their remittances account for more than five per cent of the country’s GDP, supporting key sectors such as services, industry, and agriculture. 

    IOM works with the Government of Tunisia and key partners, including the European Union and African countries, to develop integrated solutions across key routes, managing migration and harnessing the contribution of migration for joint prosperity. This means addressing trafficking and abuse of migrants, assisting those who choose to return home, and helping them reintegrate and rebuild their lives.

    In 2024, IOM supported 19,785 people in Tunisia through essential services, including assistance to vulnerable migrants, healthcare, voluntary return and reintegration, and protection efforts as well as supporting Tunisian youth find opportunity safely through regular migration pathways.

    Tunisia is a key country in global migration efforts. It is crucial for donors and policymakers to work closely with the Government to support migrants and host communities, as well as the voluntary return of migrants in irregular situations to their homes with the strict respect of their human dignity.

    IOM works globally to promote safe, orderly, and regular migration, supporting rights-based pathways that enable people to move and work with dignity and opportunity.

    For more information, please contact IOM Media Centre 

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  • MIL-OSI United Nations: 29 April 2025 Thailand launches WHO SPECS 2030 initiative to tackle leading cause of vision impairment

    Source: World Health Organisation

    Kicking off the event, Dr Warapat Wongsawad, the head of the Thai Public Health Ophthalmology Society, and Professor Dr Wanicha Chuenkongkaew, who leads the Royal College of Ophthalmologists of Thailand, provided opening remarks. Dr Andreas Mueller from WHO then delivered a keynote highlighting the importance of addressing refractive errors.  

    “Refractive error isn’t just about health—it creates societal and economic barriers. With the WHO SPECS 2030 initiative, nations get a worldwide strategy to eliminate these barriers by creating lasting, all-in-one eye care solutions,” Dr Mueller explained in his main speech. 

    Local progress and challenges  

    In the morning, Thailand’s current efforts took the spotlight. Projects like “Good Sight for Thai Children” and strategies from the Ministry of Public Health were on display. Presentations highlighted both progress and persistent challenges, from service access disparities to integration hurdles across public and private sectors.  

    Mr Udom Wongsing from the Office for Teacher and Education Institution Quality Development  illustrated how supporting children with vision impairment in the classroom is essential to building more equitable and inclusive societies.  

    In the afternoon, everyone looked ahead to Thailand’s upcoming strategy. They split into smaller teams to dive into the five SPECS 2030 pillars:  Service design, Personnel development, public Education, Costing, Surveillance and research. Participants from a range of stakeholder groups put their heads together to discuss solid srategies to boost Thailand’s eye health. 

    Each working group shared its insights during a debrief session, emphasizing integrated solutions such as training multidisciplinary visual care teams, educating the public on eye health literacy, and developing robust data systems to monitor outcomes. Dr Kulawan Rojananuangnit pointed out that the seminar laid the foundation to put Thailand at the forefront of bringing WHO SPECS 2030 to life with solid practical shifts. 

    Moving forward 

    As everything wrapped up, the participants agreed on one thing: turn the insights from the get-together into a plan for the nation. People from the health, education, private and policy circles in Thailand are banding together feeling hopeful that their homeland might just show others in the region how to tackle vision issues head-on. 

    Countries aim to hit the WHO’s worldwide goal to lower wrong refractive errors by 40% by 2030. Thailand’s initial push shows strong determination and true potential.

     

     

    During the launch week, both the Royal College of Ophthalmologists of Thailand and the Optometry Association of Thailand extended an invitation to Dr Andreas Mueller from WHO to present on SPECS 2030. Both professional bodies expressed strong interest in collaborating together with WHO to advance the initiative. 

    Photo: WHO/ Andreas Mueller and Dr Warapat Wongsawat 

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  • MIL-OSI United Nations: 5 May 2025 Departmental update WHO launches new learning catalogue to upskill regulatory workforce

    Source: World Health Organisation

    The World Health Organization (WHO) Regulation and Prequalification Department is launching a comprehensive learning resource, the Health Products Regulation and Prequalification Learning Catalogue, to help countries build stronger systems for overseeing the safety, quality and effectiveness of health products. These products include medicines, vaccines, medical devices and other technologies essential for diagnosing, treating and preventing disease.

    Effective regulatory systems are the backbone of well-functioning health systems. They play a key role in improving public health outcomes and helping to achieve universal health coverage, the goal that everyone, everywhere, should be able to get the health services and products they need without financial hardship.

    However, recent WHO data show that only about 30% of Member States currently have a well-functioning regulatory system, classified as reaching an advanced level of performance, known as maturity level 3 or 4. This means that in many countries, especially low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), there are serious gaps in how health products are regulated.

    A major challenge in LMICs is the shortage of a qualified regulatory workforce. This gap is driven by factors such as workforce shortages, staff retention issues and inadequate technical training. At the same time, the rapid pace of innovation in health technologies and the globalization of medical product supply further underscore the need for continuous development of the regulatory workforce. 

    In response to this challenge, the WHO Regulation and Prequalification Department (RPQ) has designed and implemented a wide range of learning opportunities for regulatory professionals. These include up to 52 self-paced e-learning courses, instructor-led training sessions and on-the-job training experiences. The courses cover various regulatory functions and health products and are available in multiple languages to ensure accessibility for professionals around the world.

    To improve access to these resources, the newly launched Catalogue will serve as a centralized platform, making all RPQ learning opportunities easily accessible and searchable for target audiences. For example, regulatory inspectors can explore a rich and diverse selection of training options designed to support them throughout their careers, from flexible e-learning modules (2 available) to expert-led classroom sessions (4 available) and immersive on-the-job experiences (2 available) that bring learning directly into real-world settings.

    Looking ahead, the WHO Academy and its learning platform will enable the development of even more advanced learning solutions, in collaboration with a broad network of partner institutions. It will provide free access to a comprehensive catalogue of accredited, multilingual and competency-based courses. Designed to be engaging and tailored to the diverse needs of the global regulatory workforce, these learning opportunities will help professionals strengthen their skills at every stage of their careers.

    This initiative reflects WHO’s broader commitment to strengthening regulatory systems and ensuring that people everywhere have equitable access to health products that are safe, effective, high-quality and affordable.

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  • MIL-OSI United Nations: 5 May 2025 News release Gloves do not replace hand hygiene – reminder from WHO

    Source: World Health Organisation

    Hand hygiene is one of the most effective, affordable and universal tools we have to prevent the transmission of infections and provide high-quality, clean and safe medical care.

    While medical gloves serve a vital role in preventing transmission of infection, for example when there is risk of exposure to blood and body fluids, they are not a substitute for cleaning hands at the right time. On this World Hand Hygiene Day, the World Health Organization (WHO) urges governments, health-care facilities, and frontline workers around the world to reinforce hand hygiene practices – a proven, cost-effective intervention to protect both patients and health-care workers.

    “Medical gloves can reduce the risk of infection, but they are never a replacement for hand hygiene,” said Dr Bruce Aylward, WHO Assistant Director-General, Universal Health Coverage, Life Course. “On this World Hand Hygiene Day, let us double down on our commitment and action to improve hand hygiene in health care settings to ensure the safety of patients and health-care workers.”

    Save lives, save money and reduce waste

    Gloves are protective but not foolproof or without problems

    Gloves can become contaminated just like hands and are often misused, such as being worn indefinitely while health workers switch between patients or when they are performing multiple procedures for the same patient. Additionally, overuse of gloves contributes to environmental degradation.

    An average university hospital in a developed country generates 1634 tons of health-care waste each year, which is equivalent to over 360 African elephants. Much of the waste could have been avoided if gloves were used properly and good hand hygiene was practiced. Most used gloves are considered infectious and require high-temperature incineration or specialized treatment, adding strain to already burdened waste management systems.

    Action needed now

    WHO urges national policymakers and health community take the following actions to improve rational use of gloves and hand hygiene in healthcare settings:

    On World Hand Hygiene Day, 5 May, WHO delivers a powerful message: “It might be gloves. It is always hand hygiene.”

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: International Year of Glaciers’ Preservation 2025: Safeguarding Our Ice Heritage

    Source: UNESCO World Heritage Centre

    Today marks the first-ever International Day of Glaciers’ Preservation, designated by the United Nations within the framework of the 2025 International Year of Glaciers’ Preservation, an initiative co-facilitated by UNESCO and the World Meteorological Organization (WMO). From now on, 21 March will serve as a powerful reminder of the crucial role that glaciers play in maintaining the delicate balance between environmental stability and human livelihoods. It will also help us …

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Experts of the Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination Commend Kyrgyzstan on Eradicating Statelessness, Ask about Measures to Prevent Hate Speech and Bride Kidnapping

    Source: United Nations – Geneva

    The Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination today concluded its consideration of the combined eleventh and twelfth periodic reports of Kyrgyzstan, with Committee Experts commending the State on resolving all known cases of statelessness, and asking about measures to prevent hate speech and the practice of bride kidnapping.

    Mazalo Tebie, Committee Expert and Country Co-Rapporteur, and other Committee Experts commended Kyrgyzstan on having resolved all known cases of statelessness in 2019.  They asked how the State party was bringing its legislation on statelessness in line with international standards.

    Guan Jian, Committee Expert and Country Rapporteur, said conflicts between the country’s various ethnic groups had occurred in recent years.  The State party needed to consider early detection and preventative measures to prevent hate speech.  Could the delegation provide data on crimes motivated by racist hate speech occurring online and in the media?

    Ms. Tebie also said there was a phenomenon in Kyrgyzstan called “ala kachuu” (bride kidnapping), in which young women or girls from marginalised and vulnerable ethnic groups were abducted by men and forced into marriage.  How did the State ensure the effective implementation of laws prohibiting the practice?

    In opening remarks, Marat Tagaev, Deputy Minister of Culture, Information and Youth Policy of Kyrgyzstan and head of the delegation, said Kyrgyzstan fully adhered to its international obligations under the Convention.  The President had approved the national development strategy until 2040, one of the main priorities of which was to ensure interethnic harmony and strengthen the unity of the people.

    In addition, Mr. Tagaev said Kyrgyzstan continued systematic and continuous work on the issues of refugees, internally displaced persons and stateless persons.  In 2019, it became the first country in the world to resolve all known cases of statelessness.  It had also introduced a universal system that ensured 100 per cent registration of births.

    On measures to address hate speech, the delegation said a new bill on the media had been prepared in 2022 which prevented the spread of disinformation online.  In 2025, only 25 complaints related to online hate speech had been received by the State; the State had moved to block websites in response in seven cases.

    The delegation said bridal theft was a form of violence against women.  Persons who abducted women for the purpose of marriage were punished with up to seven years imprisonment, or up to 20 years for the abduction of minors. In 2022, courts found 42 individuals guilty of these crimes.  In all schools, a special subject was taught that addressed kidnapping and abductions, explaining that these actions were crimes.

    In concluding remarks, Michal Balcerzak, Committee Chair, said the dialogue had been very constructive, addressing many issues.  The information provided by the delegation would allow the Committee to develop targeted concluding observations.

    Mr. Guan, in concluding remarks, thanked the State party for its contributions to the dialogue, which had helped to make it a success.

    Mr. Tagaev, in his concluding remarks, said that the Committee’s comments and questions would help the State party to strengthen measures to promote equality and prevent discrimination. Kyrgyzstan would continue to take active steps to prevent racial discrimination and implement the Convention, working in collaboration with civil society.

    The delegation of Kyrgyzstan consisted of representatives of the Supreme Court; General Prosecutor’s Office; Ministry of Internal Affairs; Ministry of Health; Ministry of Labour, Social Security, and Migration; Ministry of Education and Science; Ministry of Foreign Affairs; Ministry of Economy and Commerce; Cabinet of Ministers; State Commission on Religious Affairs; Administration of the President; and the Permanent Mission of Kyrgyzstan to the United Nations Office at Geneva.

    The Committee will issue its concluding observations on the report of Kyrgyzstan after the conclusion of its one hundred and fifteenth session on 9 May.  The programme of work and other documents related to the session can be found here.  Summaries of the public meetings of the Committee can be found here, while webcasts of the public meetings can be found here.

    The Committee will next meet in public on Friday, 9 May at 4 p.m. to close its one hundred and fifteenth session.

    Report

    The Committee has before it the combined eleventh and twelfth periodic reports of Kyrgyzstan (CERD/C/KGZ/11-12).

    Presentation of Report

    MARAT TAGAEV, Deputy Minister of Culture, Information and Youth Policy of Kyrgyzstan and head of the delegation, said that since Kyrgyzstan gained independence, the human rights and freedoms of its citizens, regardless of their racial and ethnic affiliation, had remained absolute and unchanged in the State.  Kyrgyzstan fully adhered to its international obligations under the Convention.  It was a multi-ethnic State with representatives of more than 100 different ethnic groups, including Uzbeks, Russians, Dungans, Uyghurs, Tajiks and other ethnic groups.  The Constitution prohibited discrimination based on race, language, ethnicity, religion, origin, as well as other circumstances.  The commission of a crime based on racial, ethnic, national, religious or interregional enmity was an aggravating circumstance.

    Set up in 2013, the Coordinating Council on Human Rights aimed to improve the mechanisms for ensuring the protection of human and civil rights and freedoms, and the implementation of international obligations in the field of human rights.  The Council included the heads of key State bodies whose activities were related to the protection of human rights, and it was headed by the Deputy Chairman of the Cabinet of Ministers of Kyrgyzstan.

    Kyrgyzstan continued systematic and continuous work on the issues of refugees, internally displaced persons and stateless persons.  In 2019, it became the first country in the world to resolve all known cases of statelessness.  It had also introduced a universal system that ensured 100 per cent registration of births.  Draft laws on Kyrgyzstan’s accession to the 1954 Convention relating to the Status of Stateless Persons and the 1961 Reduction of Statelessness Convention had also been submitted for public discussion. 

    The courts of the country applied not only the laws of Kyrgyzstan but also international treaties that had entered into force.  The Convention was thus an integral part of the legal system.  The President had approved the national development strategy until 2040, one of the main priorities of which was to ensure interethnic harmony, strengthen the unity of the people, and protect the rights of citizens, regardless of their ethnicity.

    In November 2020, the President of Kyrgyzstan had approved the plan for the promotion of a civil identity Kyrgyz jarany (Kyrgyz citizen) for the period 2021-2026.  The purpose of the plan was to develop a favourable environment for the promotion of the civic identity of Kyrgyz jarany, including through forming of a conscious understanding of the civil identity of Kyrgyz citizens; strengthening the unity of the people of Kyrgyzstan, increasing tolerance and promoting diversity; developing and promoting the State language and preserving multilingualism; promoting equal access to decision making; and increasing confidence in political institutions and public authorities.  Various national and international stakeholders were involved in developing the plan. 

    The People’s Assembly, which included 30 ethnic associations, played an important role in strengthening interethnic harmony, and preserving languages, culture and traditions of ethnic groups living in Kyrgyzstan.  In April 2025, the National Agency for Religious Affairs and Interethnic Relations was established, which implemented State policy in the field of religious relations, strengthening interethnic harmony, providing early warning, and preventing interethnic conflicts.

    Public reception offices for interethnic relations operated in 23 multiethnic districts, carrying out preventive measures, monitoring work in places where multiethnic communities lived, and promoting effective interaction with the civil sector.  In 2024, these offices carried out more than 1,100 early warning and prevention measures regarding interethnic conflicts, and close to 4,000 measures over the past four years.  As a result of this work, the number of interethnic incidents had decreased four-fold.

    Kyrgyzstan had created a legal framework to prevent discrimination in the courts.  The constitutional principle of equality before the law and the courts was reflected in the Criminal Procedure Code and laws on the status and behaviour of judges, as well as on the Supreme Court and local courts.

    The State party supported members of all ethnic groups in Kyrgyzstan to preserve, study and develop their native languages. In 161 local schools, students had the opportunity to study in Uzbek.  In 22 of them, education took place only in Uzbek.  The State strove to implement a balanced language policy that would foster a new trilingual generation of Kyrgyz citizens who spoke the official languages and one foreign language, while ensuring guarantees for the preservation of the native languages of ethnic communities.  Kyrgyzstan had developed a regulatory framework for its multilingual and multicultural education programmes.

    Questions by a Committee Expert

    GUAN JIAN, Committee Expert and Country Rapporteur, said that the high-level delegation showed the great importance that the State party attached to the dialogue.

    The demographic data that the State party had provided was not sufficiently comprehensive or specific. How did the State party apply the principle of self-identification in data collection on ethnicity, and how would it implement the Committee’s recommendations on data collection as soon as possible?

    Mr. Guan commended the State party’s legislative work.  However, in its previous concluding observations, the Committee expressed concern about the persistent lack of anti-discrimination legislation, calling on the State party to adopt such legislation in line with the Convention, with assistance from the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights.  Had progress been made in this regard?  How did the Criminal Code of 2019 contribute to combatting racial discrimination?  A draft anti-discrimination law was submitted to Parliament in 2023 but was subsequently removed from its agenda for revision.  Why was this?

    The previous concluding observations also called for compliance with Convention obligations in the judicial field. During the reporting period, law enforcement units initiated 189 criminal cases related to incitement to ethnic, racial, religious or interregional hostility.  Were all these cases brought before the courts?  Did the judicial system have internal guidelines for handling cases involving racial discrimination?  Were there rules and procedures on cooperation between judicial bodies and the Office of the Ombudsperson on such cases?  Were regular training courses on anti-racial discrimination provided for judicial personnel?  Could the delegation provide examples of cases of racial discrimination where the provisions of the Convention had been invoked in, or applied by, domestic courts?

    Mr. Guan expressed appreciation for the State party’s policy efforts related to racial discrimination, including the national action plan on development of the civil identity of Kyrgyz jarany (Kyrgyz citizen) for the period 2021-2026 and the national development strategy for 2018-2040.  What preliminary achievements had been made by these policies, and by the State programme for the security and socioeconomic development of border areas, and what challenges remained?

    The Committee was concerned that the Office of the Ombudsperson was not in compliance with the Paris Principles and that it received a low number of complaints of racial discrimination. What measures had the State party taken to strengthen the mandate of the Office to effectively promote human rights and to independently monitor and evaluate progress in the implementation of the Convention, while ensuring adequate financial and human resources to carry out its mandate?  Had the State adopted a 2017 bill aiming to strengthen the independence of the institution? Why had its head been dismissed in 2023?

    Mr. Guan expressed appreciation for the State party’s endeavours to prohibit and punish racist hate speech and hate crimes, including in the media and over the internet, according to its Constitution, Criminal Code and other laws.  The State party had also reported that there were no recorded cases over the reporting period of racist statements in the media or incitement to hatred by politicians or public figures.  However, conflicts between the country’s various ethnic groups had occurred in recent years, and development gaps and uneven opportunities between different ethnic groups in some regions still existed. 

    The State party needed to consider early detection and preventative measures to prevent hate speech, including awareness raising campaigns, incentives for strengthening self-regulation of media, systematic monitoring of online hate speech, and capacity building for State authorities.  Could the delegation provide data on cases of hate speech and ethnic groups involved in conflict, and rates of completion of trials on such cases?

    The Committee had previously called on the State party to put an end to racial profiling by the police, undertake effective investigations into all allegations of racial profiling, hold those responsible accountable, and provide effective remedies to victims, as well as to develop training programmes for law enforcement officers on identifying, investigating and prosecuting racist incidents.  Mr. Guan welcomed educational seminars and training of citizens as part of the programme on Kyrgyz jarany (Kyrgyz citizen).  What measures were in place to ensure that law enforcement officers did not engage in racial profiling?

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said Kyrgyzstan was committed to its obligations under the Convention and took every effort to prevent racial discrimination.  A bill on the rights of minorities had been prepared to strengthen legal mechanisms to prevent racial discrimination.  However, Parliament had called for the revision of this bill to consider different views and proposals; this process was ongoing.

    Kyrgyzstan was a poly-ethnic State. As of January 2025, the State had a population of 7.2 million.  The 2022 census revealed that Kyrgyz, Uzbeks, Russians, Uyghurs and Kazakhs represented the largest ethnic groups.  Citizens had the right to voluntarily report their ethnic identity in the census.  The Constitution enshrined the equality of all citizens regardless of their nationality or ethnicity.

    Discrimination in all forms was prohibited in Kyrgyzstan.  No person could be discriminated against based on race, ethnicity or other characteristics.  The State provided judicial protection from all forms of discrimination.  Courts treated people equally regardless of their ethnicity.  All persons subjected to discrimination could file a complaint with the courts.  The Supreme Court had called on the State party to revise laws that contravened the Constitution.  In cases of serious crimes such as murder and ill-treatment, discriminatory motives based on race, ethnicity, religion, language or other grounds were considered to be aggravating circumstances and could be qualified as crimes against humanity.

    The Ministry of the Interior provided 1,000 hours of training for newly recruited law enforcement officers, which included classes on human rights, international human rights law, and preventing all forms of discrimination.  Disciplinary cases had been brought against 5,400 officials in recent years.  A service had been established for submitting complaints against law enforcement officers. There were 53 cases related to racial discrimination in 2023 and 47 in 2024.  The judicial academy, from 2019, had also trained 429 judges on international human rights standards.  There were judges of Russian, Tartar and Kurd ethnicity in the Supreme Court.

    The Office of the Ombudsperson provided oversight on human rights issues in the State.  A new constitutional law on increasing the independence and powers of the Office and bringing the Office in line with the Paris Principles had been developed.  Recently, the Office’s budget had been increased to allow it to carry out its activities more effectively.

    Follow-Up Questions by Committee Experts

    GUAN JIAN, Committee Expert and Country Rapporteur, asked whether the national statistics committee had a fixed term for carrying out the next census.  How many staff members did the Ombudsperson’s Office have and what were their roles?  What were the sources of its funding and what was its annual budget?  How did it work with courts and law enforcement?  Did the Office have branches in each region of the country?

    A Committee Expert said racist incidents in the country seemed to have increased over the years, but disciplinary measures against the police seemed to be decreasing.  In how many disciplinary cases had police officers been convicted?  What were the outcomes of disciplinary proceedings?

    One Committee Expert congratulated the State party on having completely eradicated statelessness.  Did the State party ensure the independence of the Council of Human Rights, which was under the President’s Office?  What findings had the Council made?  How did it cooperate with civil society?

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said that currently, 115 persons worked for the Ombudsperson’s Office, which had branch offices in seven regions.  The Office’s financial resources had increased each year in recent years.  The Office had departments for oversight on human rights and children’s rights, a complaints department, and a department for judicial activities.  The Office monitored the rights and freedoms of citizens during both open and closed judicial proceedings.  It cooperated with law enforcement agencies and monitored the compliance of these agencies with their human rights obligations.

    All law enforcement agents underwent training activities on human rights.  Disciplinary offences for police officers were not administrative or criminal processes; they were internal processes.  Persons could submit complaints against officers via social media and email.  If investigations found that crimes had been committed, cases were transferred to the Prosecutor’s Office.  There had been an increase in complaints recently, which had led to an increase in disciplinary proceedings, but around half of complaints were found to be groundless.

    The Kyrgyz jarany (Kyrgyz citizen) project promoted respect for diversity, social cohesion and statehood. Under the project, some 23 regions had established offices that carried out monitoring and activities to prevent interethnic conflicts, including meetings with ethnic community representatives and training activities.

    The State programme on the development of border areas aimed at improving the living conditions of the population in these areas, strengthening the State border and reducing internal migration.  There were plans to develop infrastructure, agriculture and electrical supply, and reduce natural disasters in these areas.  The comprehensive programme of socio-economic development of regions was also in place, which included policies for the development of mountainous and border regions.

    Questions by a Committee Expert

    MAZALO TEBIE, Committee Expert and Country Co-Rapporteur, said public offices responsible for interethnic issues had received 167 requests in 2022 related to preventing discrimination against ethnic groups.  What follow-up was given to these requests?  Could the delegation provide data on investigations into crimes motivated by racist hate speech and hate crimes occurring online and in the media? How did the State help victims to access legal aid and support services?

    Reportedly, women and girls belonging to ethnic minorities, such as Uzbeks, Tajiks and Dungans, and rural women remained underrepresented in the public and political sphere, and patriarchal norms and socio-economic barriers restricted their access to education and professional opportunities.  How were they encouraged to participate in public and private life?  What measures were in place to prevent gender and ethnic stereotypes?  Were there quotas or mechanisms to ensure fair representation of women from ethnic minorities in decision-making bodies?  How did the State party support access to basic social services for minority women?

    Members of the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex community had reportedly faced difficulties in accessing health services, and were frequently exposed to blackmail, intimidation, extortion, as well as arbitrary arrests and ill-treatment. What measures were in place to include these persons in awareness raising campaigns, prevent and investigate discrimination and violence against them, and ensure their access to legal protection?

    There were reports of restrictions of rights to freedom of expression, peaceful assembly, association and opinion in the State party.  Human rights defenders and journalists were frequently exposed to threats, stigmatisation, arrests, arbitrary detentions, and sanctions such as fines, expulsions or closures of entities.  Kyrgyzstan had fallen 50 places in the 2023 World Press Freedom Index, to 122nd out of 180 countries.  What was being done to prevent the intimation of human rights defenders, to guarantee freedom of expression and other fundamental freedoms, and to release detained journalists, human rights defenders and non-governmental organization leaders?

    In 2024, the President promulgated a law on “foreign agents”.  How would the State party address concerns related to this law, which seemingly could force some non-governmental organizations to close or self-censor?  What safeguards were in place to ensure that civil society organizations could operate freely, regardless of their foreign funding?  Many non-governmental organizations had reported an increase in negative attitudes to their work by State representatives.  What measures were in place to protect non-governmental organizations from interference and intimidation by public authorities?

    A general ban on public assemblies had been imposed in 2022 to prevent certain peaceful assemblies.  Why was this ban introduced?  How did the State party ensure that citizens could exercise their right to freedom of assembly?  What measures were planned to prevent abuses of this ban by the police? Were there any redress mechanisms for citizens sanctioned under this ban?

    New laws had been implemented that banned wearing of religious clothing, including the niqab, in public spaces, and proselytising outside places of worship.  Why had these new restrictions, which ran the risk of violating the right to freedom of religion, been introduced?  How did the State party protect the right to freedom of religion and prevent religious minorities from being marginalised by these laws?

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said non-profit organizations played an important part in life in Kyrgyzstan, helping to solve societal problems.  Amendments were brought to the law on non-commercial organizations in 2024 that aimed to ensure transparency and accountability for these organizations. Inclusion of these organizations in the State register ensured transparency in their finances.

    The State party banned discrimination against lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex persons, who were guaranteed equal access to justice.  In one case, it was found that a television station had recorded a member of this community without their permission; the station was issued with a fine in response.

    There were 21,000 civil service employees, of which 35 per cent were women.  There were 340 members of minority groups in the civil service. There were no quotas for employment in the civil service.

    The draft bill on freedom of worship and religious associations sought to bring State legislation on religion in line with international norms.  It included regulations on registration of religious organizations and sites and labour relations in such organizations.  Freedom of worship was a fundamental right enshrined in the Constitution and the legal system.  There was no ban specifically on religious clothing, only a ban on covering one’s face in public institutions.  Religious organizations could not proselytise, but there were no other bans on their activities.

    Under State law, no one had the right to restrict peaceful assemblies.  Laws prevented citizens from being forced to participate in meetings. Public authorities needed to ensure public safety, and could ban public meetings that threatened public order.

    A new bill on the media had been prepared in 2022.  The bill was now under review in the President’s Office.  Representatives of the media fully supported this bill, which prevented the spread of disinformation online.  In 2025, only 25 complaints related to online hate speech had been received by the State; the State had moved to block websites in response in seven cases.

    Questions by Committee Experts

    MAZALO TEBIE, Committee Expert and Country Co-Rapporteur, said that the State party had established several measures to prevent discrimination against minorities.  How did it evaluate the effectiveness of these measures? Could women wear the niqab?  How did the State party ensure freedom of religion?

    There was a phenomenon in Kyrgyzstan called “ala kachuu” (bride kidnapping), in which young women or girls were abducted by men and forced into marriage.  This practice was said to mainly affect women and girls from rural communities, and from marginalised and vulnerable groups.  What actions had been taken to ensure the effective implementation of laws prohibiting the practice, and to raise awareness among rural communities about women’s rights?  What support services were available to abducted women and girls?  Did the State party have up-to-date data on the most affected ethnic groups or regions?

    Another Committee Expert asked whether there was a framework for the participation of minorities in all law-making processes.

    FAITH DIKELEDI PANSY TLAKULA, Committee Expert and Follow-Up Rapporteur, said that the Committee’s previous concluding observations had called on the State party to implement the views of the Human Rights Committee and pardon Azimjan Askarov, considering his poor health.  The Committee deeply regretted that he had passed away five days after the State party had reported that his health was improving.  What measures were in place to protect human rights defenders, journalists and non-governmental organizations working on the rights of ethnic minorities from reprisals?

    A Committee Expert welcomed that there were thousands of civil society organizations in the State party.  Did they take part in meetings preparing for the current dialogue?  How many of these organizations had been banned?

    Another Committee Expert said that in one court case concerning an attack against homosexual persons, the court had sent back the case to the prosecution.  What happened to the case after this?  Was the fine issued to the television station for recording a member of the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex community without their permission sufficient?

    GUAN JIAN, Committee Expert and Country Rapporteur, welcomed measures to promote the protection of equal rights for all ethnic groups.  The Committee had previously expressed concern about the low living standards of the Mughat, characterised by high unemployment and school dropout rates; land expropriation, home demolitions and forced evictions, disproportionately affecting Uzbeks from Osh and Jalalabad and frequently carried out in the absence of due process guarantees; discrimination against Uzbeks in access to work; and the absence of remedies for persons arbitrarily dismissed from their posts following the events of 2010.  What measures were implemented to address the Committee’s concerns?

    Parliamentary deputies’ seats had in 2021 been reduced from 120 to 90.  Representatives of minority ethnic communities had held 16 seats in 2021. What impact did the reduction of seats have on the representation of ethnic groups?  As of 2022, some 11 per cent of members of local councils and four per cent of State and municipal administration staff were members of minority ethnic groups, while 3.1 per cent of police officers were from minority groups. What measures were in place to increase minority representation in these bodies and the judiciary?

    Mr. Guan welcomed the State party’s efforts to promote multilingual education.  The law on education stated that educational services could be provided in a foreign language.  Were minority languages considered to be “foreign languages”?  What financing was provided for multilingual education? There were only 2,450 ethnic Uzbeks, 125 ethnic Tajiks, and 417 Dungans studying in their mother tongues in Kyrgyzstan in 2021.  Why were these numbers so low?

    Many institutions had been established by the State party to address interethnic tensions, such as the public advisory councils on interethnic relations; community liaison offices; the monitoring centre of the Ministry of Culture, Information, Sport and Youth Policy; and the interagency commission.  Were these organizations run by the State or non-governmental organizations?  What were each of their tasks, including in implementing the Kyrgyz jarany (citizens of Kyrgyzstan) plan?  What personnel did these institutions have, how were their powers divided, and how did they cooperate with law enforcement?

    Related to June 2010 ethnic violence in the south of the State, among a total of 5,642 criminal cases initiated by law enforcement agencies, proceedings had been suspended in 3,919 cases, a majority of the cases, while inquiries were being conducted.  What data could be provided on these suspended cases?

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said bridal theft was a form of violence against women.  This crime was punished under criminal legislation and punishments had recently been strengthened.  Persons who abducted women for the purpose of marriage were punished with up to seven years imprisonment, or up to 20 years for the abduction of minors.  No amnesty was provided to perpetrators.  In 2022, courts found 42 individuals guilty of these crimes.  In all schools, a special subject was taught that addressed kidnapping and abductions, explaining that these actions were crimes.

    Some 97 per cent of children in the State party attended schools.  The State promoted education in native tongues and official languages.  More than 4,000 children were being taught in the Uzbek language, and there were also special schools teaching in other minority ethnic languages such as Tajik.

    Currently, there were around 1,500 members of ethnic minorities serving as civil servants, some 35 per cent of whom were women.  There were three representatives of minority ethnic groups currently serving in Parliament. Uzbeks, Dungans, Russians and Kazakhs were represented in parliamentary deputy seats, five per cent of which were held by women.

    After the events of June 2010, more than 5,300 criminal cases had been launched and more than 300 people had been brought to justice, including one life sentence conviction.  Investigations were based on respect for human rights and ethnicity was not a factor in the consideration of cases.  Kyrgyzstan was committed to carrying out fair trials in line with international standards.  There were some 42 cases involving murder, and several cases involving destruction of public and private property.  Some three billion som in damages were incurred by the State.

    Regarding the death in custody of Azimjan Askarov, the central prison hospital had diagnosed him with pneumonia and had provided him with treatment; however, he had rejected this treatment, leading to his death.  An investigation into the death was ongoing.

    The case of an alleged attack on homosexual people had been dropped after being returned to the prosecution. Regarding the case of a transgender girl recorded by a television station, courts provided financial compensation for moral damage, considering the degree of damage caused and the circumstances of the case.

    Questions by Committee Experts

    GUAN JIAN, Committee Expert and Country Rapporteur, called for more detailed information on public works undertaken in Osh city without the permission of local residents, and the situation of the Mughat community, some members of which were relocated after their lands were flooded.  Were affected people provided with compensation?

    A Committee Expert said that racial discrimination and climate change inhibited access to health for the Mughat community.  How did the State party promote access to health, safe food and drinking water for this community, and access to reproductive health rights for its women and children?

    Another Committee Expert asked whether parents who refused to send their children to school were criminally prosecuted by the Ministry of Justice.

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said the State party was implementing a project to digitally register all newborns, which had promoted 100 per cent registration of births in the Mughat community.  Some 95 per cent of the Kyrgyz population had access to drinking water.  The State party was building water pipelines to increase access to drinking water in remote communities, including to the Mughat community.

    Citizens had the inalienable right to healthcare services, regardless of their ethnicity or other characteristics. The programme on State guarantees approved in 2023 aimed to improve access to medical services for vulnerable groups and increase the quality of health services.

    Parents were required to send school age children to school.  They had the right to choose the language of education and between public and private schools or homeschooling.  A bill had been developed that called for fining of parents who refused to send their children to school.

    The State party had identified sites for demolition in Osh in a project to develop public roads.  Some 69 million som had been provided in compensation to persons whose homes or property were affected.  Persons who felt that their property rights had been infringed by State development projects could file complaints in court.

    The Coordinating Council on Human Rights was an advisory council that sought to improve the implementation of human rights and fundamental freedoms in the State party.  Headed by the Deputy Prime Minister and including representatives of State authorities and the Ombudsperson, it coordinated the preparation of reports to international treaty bodies and implementation of these bodies’ recommendations.

    Parliament included representatives of national ethnic groups, who were involved in drafting legislation.  A web portal had also been set up that allowed citizens to make comments on legislative proposals.

    Questions by a Committee Expert

    MAZALO TEBIE, Committee Expert and Country Co-Rapporteur, said the Committee welcomed the State’s initiatives regarding the protection of refugees, including planned accession to the 1951 Refugee Convention and its 1967 Protocol, and the national action plan on migration management for 2022 to 2025. However, there was a high rate of rejection of applications for refugee status, and some refugees reportedly lived in precarious conditions, including in overcrowded temporary shelters with limited access to healthcare, clean water and education.  Uyghur, Uzbek and Chechen refugees and asylum seekers were reportedly extremely vulnerable.  What measures were in place to protect the rights of refugees and asylum seekers and promote access to residence?

    In 2024, protests against migrants had been held, leading to violence against foreigners with legal residence status.  What measures were in place to prevent violence against foreigners, including irregular migrants, and to provide victims with support? Migrants employed in the agricultural and construction sectors often faced precarious working conditions, with limited access to health and support services.  What measures were in place to protect the rights of migrant workers, establish clear standards for the employment of migrants, and promote their integration into society?  Were there institutions that assessed working conditions for migrants? 

    Nearly one in four Kyrgyz citizens migrated to neighbouring countries to work.  These emigrants reportedly struggled to access basic services in host countries.  Why did many women choose to emigrate?  What measures were in place to support them, including in Russia?  There were some Kyrgyz nationals in Syria and Iraq that were reportedly waiting to be repatriated.  How was the State party supporting their return?

    The Committee had received reports of numerous cases of extradition of refugees and asylum seekers, including Uyghurs from China and Uzbeks.  How did the State party prevent refoulement?  How many extradited migrants had been subjected to refoulement?

    The State party had implemented a law that guaranteed the civil registration of all children.  Kyrgyzstan was also the first country in the region to have resolved all known cases of statelessness; this was commendable. However, the Government had proposed amendments in 2023 to the citizenship law that prevented the conferral of Kyrgyz citizenship to the children of foreign parents born in Kyrgyzstan. This could lead to statelessness. How was the State party bringing its legislation on statelessness in line with international standards?

    What measures had been taken to provide continuous training to judges and lawyers on human rights, discrimination and the application of the Convention?  How many judges and lawyers had been trained?

    Responses by the Delegation

     

    The delegation said that in Kyrgyzstan, refugees had the right to health and education services and the right to freedom of movement.  The State assessed each application for refugee status in cooperation with the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees and promoted the integration of refugees into society.  From 2019 to 2024, the State party had received around 300 appeals against decisions to refuse refugee status.  Around 140 of these cases had gone to the cassation court, which had decided to grant refugee status in some cases.

    Kyrgyzstan upheld the principle of non-refoulement.  Extraditions could not be carried out if there was suspicion of the person involved being subjected to torture or other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment. Kyrgyzstan worked with international partners to assess risks in individual cases.  In 2024, the State party extradited 49 foreign citizens, including seven to the Russian Federation.  None of these persons had requested refugee status.

    Some 37 criminal cases had been initiated in response to violent incidents relating to 2024 protests against migrants.  The State party was carrying out activities to prevent broad-scale violations against foreign nationals, including ongoing informational activities.  Local populations now understood better the rights of foreign nationals.

    State laws regulated the situation of stateless persons in Kyrgyzstan.  Efforts to address statelessness were ongoing.  The State party had devised procedures for providing the children of stateless persons with identification documents, including the 2024 project that ensured 100 per cent issuance of birth certificates to newborns.

    Consular services provided for the protection of Kyrgyz citizens abroad, including migrant workers.  The Ombudsperson’s Office received complaints of rights violations from migrants and implemented response measures. Children of Kyrgyz migrants needed to be able to speak basic Russian to attend school in the Russian Federation; the State party thus provided Russian language courses to these children.

    The State party had trained 429 judges in 2025 on international human rights standards.  The judiciary was committed to promoting diversity and equality.

    In 2021, the State party repatriated more than 400 citizens from Iraq and Syria, including children.  Measures had been implemented to promote the reintegration and rehabilitation of these citizens and prevent their stigmatisation.

    Questions by Committee Experts

    MAZALO TEBIE, Committee Expert and Country Co-Rapporteur, asked whether only foreigners who did not have refugee status could be extradited.  The Committee hoped that the law implementing the 1951 Refugee Convention and the 1967 Protocol would be adopted soon.  If foreign women who were married to Kyrgyz men divorced, did their children keep Kyrgyz nationality?  Why did the State party require foreigners to take HIV tests? The State party had developed a “compatriots of foreign nationality” card.  Who were these “compatriots of foreign nationality”?

    A Committee Expert said there had been a reported drop in teaching of the Uzbek language after the 2010 violence. Were nation-wide examinations conducted in the Uzbek language for students learning in that language?

    Another Committee Expert asked if training course for judicial officials addressed the application of the Convention in civil and criminal cases.  Were there examples of judicial decisions where the Convention was applied?

    A Committee Expert congratulated the State party on eradicating statelessness as of 2019, and for developing a statelessness determination procedure.  Kyrgyzstan needed to ratify the statelessness conventions and share its best practices with other nations.

    Responses by the Delegation

    The delegation said that under national legislation, refugees could not be extradited.  The State party waited until processes considering applications for refugee status concluded before considering extradition.  Two draft bills on acceding to the 1951 Refugee Convention and 1967 Protocol were currently under consideration.

    If one parent had Kyrgyz nationality, children could receive Kyrgyz nationality, regardless of the location of their birth.  Children of stateless parents born in Kyrgyzstan were also granted Kyrgyz nationality.  Persons could lose Kyrgyz nationality if they served in the army of a foreign State or if they received citizenship after submitting falsified documents.  Kyrgyz citizens could change their citizenship only once; persons needed to submit documents proving their ethnic identity to change their citizenship.  Divorces were not grounds for changing citizenship.

    To enrol in universities in Kyrgyzstan, students needed to sit the General Republican Exam in either Kyrgyz or Russian.

    Kyrgyzstan did not required foreigners to submit a certificate showing that they were HIV-negative when applying for a visa.  Information related to HIV tests was not made public.  Forced tests were carried out in a confidential manner based on court decisions.

    Courts could apply international conventions directly.  All criminal cases related to the June 2010 events had been closed, but affected persons had the right to appeal cases and seek compensation.

    The children and grandchildren of Kyrgyz citizens who lived overseas had the right to apply for the “compatriots of foreign nationality” card, which allowed them to live and work in Kyrgyzstan without additional residence or work permits.

    Closing Remarks

    MICHAL BALCERZAK, Committee Chair, said the dialogue had been very constructive, addressing many issues.  The information provided by the delegation would allow the Committee to develop targeted concluding observations.

    GUAN JIAN, Committee Expert and Country Rapporteur, thanked the State party for its contributions to the dialogue, which had helped to make it a success.  He expressed hope that the State party would follow-up on remaining unanswered questions and closed by thanking all persons who had contributed to the dialogue.

    MARAT TAGAEV, Deputy Minister of Culture, Information and Youth Policy of Kyrgyzstan and head of the delegation, said that the Committee’s comments and questions would help the State party to strengthen measures to promote equality and prevent discrimination. Kyrgyzstan would continue to take active steps to prevent racial discrimination and implement the Convention, working in collaboration with civil society.  The State party would work to implement the Committee’s recommendations and to build an inclusive and just society.

    __________

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    not an official record. English and French versions of our releases are different as they are the product of two separate coverage teams that work independently.

     

    CERD.25.08E

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Committee against Torture Concludes Eighty-Second Session

    Source: United Nations – Geneva

    The Committee against Torture this morning closed its eighty-second session, after adopting concluding observations on the reports of Armenia, France, Mauritius, Monaco, Turkmenistan and Ukraine, which were reviewed during the session. The session was held from 7 April to 2 May.

    Claude Heller, Committee Chairperson, read out a summary of the concluding observations for each country reviewed this session under the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment . The concluding observations will be available on the webpage of the session as of 1 p.m. this afternoon.

    Mr. Heller said that the Committee had still not been informed whether its next two sessions scheduled for 2025 would take place. Sixteen treaty body sessions were at stake, and the Subcommittee on the Prevention of Torture had had to postpone four of its eight visits planned for 2025. As soon as more information became available, the Committee would announce the dates of its upcoming sessions and the country reviews planned for each session.

    Mr. Heller also noted that the sudden cessation of hybrid meetings would continue to negatively impact the work of the Committee members, civil society organizations, national human rights institutions, national preventive mechanisms and other stakeholders.

    In conclusion, he said that the Committee now came to the end of yet another session, held with professionalism, independence, and a constructive spirit to fully adhere to its mandate.

    Peter Vedel Kessing, Committee Rapporteur, presented the annual report, which covered the period from 11 May 2024 to 2 May 2025, including the eightieth session, which was held from 8 to 26 July 2024; the eighty-first session which was held from 28 October to 22 November 2024; and the eighty-second session which was held from 7 April to 2 May 2025.

    Documents relating to the Committee’s work, including reports submitted by States parties and the concluding observations of the Committee, will be available on the website of the session. Summaries of the public meetings of the Committee can be found here, and webcasts of the public meetings can be found here.

    The dates and details of the next session of the Committee will be communicated at a later date.
     

    Statements

    PETER VEDEL KESSING, Committee Rapporteur, presented the Committee’s annual report, which covered the period from 11 May 2024 to 2 May 2025, including the eightieth session, which was held from 8 to 26 July 2024; the eighty-first session which was held from 28 October to 22 November 2024; and the eighty-second session which was held from 7 April to 2 May 2025.

    As of today, there were 175 States parties to the Convention against Torture and other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment. Since the adoption of the Committee’s previous annual report, Dominica had acceded to the Convention, on 5 December 2024. The Committee called upon all States that had not ratified the Convention to do so and called upon those that were already parties to accept all the procedures of the Convention in order to enable the Committee to fulfil all aspects of its mandate. As of today, there were 94 States parties to the Optional Protocol to the Convention. 

    The Committee held a joint meeting between the members of the Committee and the Chair of the Subcommittee on Prevention of Torture. The Committee adopted a joint statement with the Special Rapporteur on torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment, the Subcommittee on Prevention of Torture, and the Board of Trustees of the United Nations Voluntary Fund for Victims of Torture to mark the United Nations International Day in Support of Victims of Torture, which was commemorated on 26 June.

    To mark the fortieth anniversary of the adoption of the Convention, the Committee, jointly with the other United Nations anti‑torture mechanisms held a high-level event in Geneva on 14 November 2024.

    The Committee expressed its appreciation to non-governmental organizations, with special thanks to the World Organization against Torture. The Committee requested that all multilingual hybrid meetings be maintained as a feature of an adequately resourced session and called upon States parties to support this request. 

    Concerning complaints under article 22 of the Convention, as of today, the

    the Committee had registered, since 1989, 1,260 complaints concerning 45 States parties. Of those, 449 complaints had been discontinued and 152 had been declared inadmissible. The Committee had adopted final decisions on the merits in 524 complaints and found violations of the Convention in 220 of them. Considering the adopted communications during the current session, some 133 complaints were pending consideration. All the Committee’s decisions could be found in the updated treaty body case law database, on the website of the Office of the High Commission for Human Rights, and in the Official Document System of the United Nations.

    At its eightieth session, the Committee adopted decisions on the merits in respect of 10 communications. The Committee further found two communications inadmissible and it discontinued the consideration of 19 complaints. At its eighty-first session, the Committee adopted decisions on the merits in respect of six communications. The Committee found three communications inadmissible and discontinued the consideration of 12 communications. At its eighty-second session, the Committee adopted decisions on the merits in 12 communications. It found 2 communications inadmissible and it discontinued the consideration of 12 cases. One communication was postponed.

    CLAUDE HELLER, Committee Chairperson, read out a summary of the concluding observations on the reports of the States parties that were reviewed during the session.

    Armenia

    Concerning Armenia, the Committee commended the State party on the adoption of its new Criminal Code, which established an expanded definition of torture, along with the adoption of a new Criminal Procedure Code, introducing a number of new procedural safeguards against torture and increasing the availability of non-custodial measures. The Committee recommended that Armenia ensure that the penalties for torture were commensurate with the gravity of the crime. It also recommended that the State party train prosecutors and judges on the use of non-custodial measures, provide sufficient material and financial resources for their application, and adopt the necessary regulations to ensure that they may be applied in practice.

    With regard to psychiatric and social care institutions, the Committee recommended that the State party guarantee sufficient legal and procedural safeguards for residents in psychiatric institutions and social care facilities, both in law and in practice. It also recommended that the State party reduce recourse to coercion in psychiatric settings, and ensure that physical or chemical means of restraint were used in accordance with domestic law and international standards. 

    France

    As for France, the Committee expressed its deep concern about the numerous allegations of excessive use of force, including lethal force, and ill-treatment by law enforcement officials, and was seriously concerned that such cases reportedly disproportionately affected members of certain minority groups, in particular persons of African descent, persons of Arab origin or Muslim religion, indigenous peoples and non-nationals. The Committee recommended that the State party ensure that all allegations of excessive use of force and ill-treatment were investigated promptly, thoroughly and impartially by an independent body, that those responsible were held accountable, and that victims or their families obtain adequate redress.

    The Committee recommended that France continue its efforts to improve living conditions in all places of deprivation of liberty and to reduce overcrowding in prisons and other places of detention. It also recommended that the State party ensure that all allegations of ill-treatment were thoroughly investigated, that alleged perpetrators were prosecuted and, if found guilty, sentenced to appropriate penalties, and that victims or their families received redress, including adequate compensation. It recommended that the State party improve the monitoring and control of violence among prisoners. The Committee recommended that the State party take all necessary measures to encourage the reporting of hate crimes motivated by racist, Islamophobic, anti-Semitic, xenophobic or homophobic prejudice, and to ensure that such crimes were thoroughly investigated, that perpetrators were prosecuted and punished, and that victims had access to effective remedies.

    Mauritius

    Concerning Mauritius, the Committee acknowledged the State party’s commitment to develop a code of practice for police officers and to strengthen their training to address those shortcomings. The Committee recommended that Mauritius strengthen its efforts to further ensure that the Independent Police Complaints Commission was properly resourced and equipped to carry out its functions, and guarantee that acts of torture and ill-treatment were promptly, impartially and effectively investigated and prosecuted, as appropriate. The Committee also asked the State party to take all appropriate measures to prevent acts of intimidation and reprisals against alleged victims, their legal representatives, and relatives.

    The Committee recommended that Mauritius ensure that all deaths in custody were promptly and impartially investigated by an independent entity, including through independent forensic examinations, with due regard to the Minnesota Protocol on the Investigation of Potentially Unlawful Death. Where appropriate, the Committee recommended that the corresponding sanctions be applied. It also asked the State party to compile and provide it with detailed information on all incidents of death in all places of detention, the causes, and the outcomes of the investigations.

    Monaco

    As for Monaco, the Committee voiced its concern about reports that the “maison d’arrêt de Monaco” and its facilities were structurally incompatible with their current purpose, as they remained unsuitable for prolonged deprivation of liberty. While it was aware of the State party’s land-use constraints, the Committee encouraged the State party to consider transferring prisoners to a new prison facility that better complied with international standards on deprivation of liberty and the prevention of ill-treatment. Meanwhile, it recommended that the State party continue its efforts to improve living conditions in the “maison d’arrêt de Monaco”, including by ensuring that persons in pretrial detention were allowed visits or telephone calls without specific authorisation from the judicial authorities.

    The Committee expressed its concern about reports of precarious working conditions affecting many migrant domestic workers and undeclared migrant workers, particularly in the construction, hotel and catering sectors, as well as on private yachts. The Committee recommended that the State party strengthen the capacity and resources of the labour inspectorate to enable it to monitor more effectively the situation of migrant workers, in particular domestic workers, including with regard to their recruitment and working conditions. It also recommended the State party to redouble its efforts to inform migrant workers, including undeclared workers, of their rights and the complaint mechanisms available to them, and facilitate their access to those mechanisms.

    Turkmenistan

    With regard to Turkmenistan, the Committee expressed grave concern about the persistent reports of widespread torture and ill-treatment of detainees in the State party. Despite the installation of audio-visual equipment in some detention facilities across the country, such measures appeared insufficient in preventing and curbing abuse. The Committee had further expressed serious concern about the lack of accountability, which reflected a worrying pattern of institutional impunity. The Committee urged the State party to adopt a zero-tolerance policy towards torture, including a clear public statement from the highest levels of Government, and to ensure that all allegations were promptly and independently investigated, perpetrators held accountable, and victims granted full redress.

    The Committee noted and welcomed the adoption of the Ombudsman Act and the recent “B” status accreditation of Turkmenistan’s Ombudsperson by the Global Alliance of National Human Rights Institutions. However, it expressed concern about the reported lack of independence and limited authority of the Ombudsperson’s office, particularly its failure to address serious and systemic human rights violations. The Committee recommended that the State party fully implement the recommendations of the Alliance’s Subcommittee on Accreditation and take all necessary steps to establish an independent national monitoring body capable of conducting unannounced visits to all places of detention, engaging with detainees in private, and responding effectively to allegations of abuse in line with the Paris Principles.

    Ukraine

    Concerning Ukraine, the Committee acknowledged the challenges faced by the State party in fully implementing its obligations under the Convention due to the full-scale invasion by the Russian Federation against it. It recalled, nevertheless, that the Convention was applicable in the State party’s entire territory and Ukraine should therefore take all possible steps to implement it.

    The Committee noted Ukraine’s commitment and measures taken to abide by international humanitarian law and international human rights law in the context of the ongoing armed conflict and occupation, but expressed concerns about reports indicating allegations of torture and ill-treatment, threats, humiliation, and other violations of Russian prisoners of war, allegedly committed by the Ukrainian armed forces and military police, as well as the inadequate recording and reporting of their visible injuries sustained by torture or ill-treatment, among other concerns. The Committee underscored that the prohibition of torture was non-derogable, that no exceptional circumstances whatsoever may be invoked as a justification of torture, and that the obligations stemming from this prohibition were not subject to reciprocity.

    The Committee also recommended that Ukraine ensure that all fundamental legal safeguards were guaranteed in practice for all detained persons from the outset of the deprivation of their liberty, including the right to request and receive a medical examination by an independent doctor, free of charge, or a doctor of their choice, that was conducted out of hearing and sight of police officers, unless the doctor concerned explicitly requested otherwise, as the access to an initial confidential medical examination did not appear to be routinely granted in Ukraine, and if it was granted, it was reportedly performed in the presence of a police officer.

    Other

    Mr. Heller said that during the session, the Committee also adopted lists of issues for Pakistan and Tajikistan and lists of issues prior to reporting for Antigua and Barbuda, Botswana, Iceland, Iraq, Kenya, Montenegro, State of Palestine and Uruguay.

    The Committee had still not been informed whether its next two sessions scheduled for 2025 would take place. Sixteen treaty body sessions were at stake, and the Subcommittee on the Prevention of Torture had had to postpone four of its eight visits planned for 2025. As soon as more information became available, the Committee would announce the dates of its upcoming sessions and the country reviews planned for each session. Mr. Heller noted that the sudden cessation of hybrid meetings would continue to negatively impact the work of the Committee members, civil society organizations, national human rights institutions, national preventive mechanisms and other stakeholders.

    Concerning the individual complaints procedure, he said the Committee this session examined 26 individual complaints. Of the examined cases, two were deemed inadmissible. Additionally, 12 cases were decided on the merits: in one case the Committee found no violations, while in 11 cases the Committee determined there was a violation by the State party. Furthermore, the Committee adopted 12 discontinuance requests. 

    Mr. Heller read out the results of the work of the Committee Rapporteurs on follow-up to concluding observations, individual cases, and reprisals. A summary of the meeting that was held on these results can be found here.

    In conclusion, Mr. Heller said that the Committee now came to the end of yet another session, held with professionalism, independence, and a constructive spirit to fully adhere to its mandate.

    __________

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    not an official record. English and French versions of our releases are different as they are the product of two separate coverage teams that work independently.

     

    CAT.009E

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  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Ms. María Angela Holguín Cuéllar of Colombia – Secretary-General’s Personal Envoy on Cyprus

    Source: United Nations MIL-OSI 2

    nited Nations Secretary-General António Guterres announced today the appointment of María Angela Holguín Cuéllar of Colombia as his Personal Envoy on Cyprus.  Following the conclusion of the informal meeting in Cyprus in a broader format, held in Geneva on 17 and 18 March, the Secretary-General has asked Ms. Holguín to reengage with the parties in order to work on next steps on the Cyprus issue and advise him.  Ms. Holguín completed a previous assignment as Personal Envoy of the Secretary-General on Cyprus from January to July 2024.

    Ms. Holguín brings extensive diplomatic experience at the highest levels, including as Minister of Foreign Affairs of Colombia (2010-2018).  She also served as delegate of the President of Colombia at the Peace Process Negotiation in Havana, Cuba (2015-2016), and was a member of the Cabinet for Post-Conflict (2017-2018).  Previous posts in her diplomatic career include the position of Permanent Representative of Colombia to the United Nations, Ambassador to Venezuela and Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs.

    Ms. Holguín holds a degree in Political Science from the Universidad de Los Andes in Bogotá, Colombia.  She also studied at the Centre d´Études Diplomatiques et Stratégiques and at the Université Paris–Sorbonne in Paris, France.  In addition to Spanish, she speaks English and French.

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  • MIL-OSI United Nations: 2 May 2025 Feature story OpenTeleRehab: a success story of inclusive telerehabilitation

    Source: World Health Organisation

    In 2022, the World Health Organization (WHO) and the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) introduced the Global standard for accessibility of telehealth services.

    Following the release, Humanity & Inclusion, an international non-governmental organization committed to inclusion and a non-state actor in official relations with WHO, upgraded its telerehabilitation platform OpenTeleRehab to align with these standards, making it one of the first known applications.

    Importance of accessibility in rehabilitation services

    Rehabilitation is an essential part of universal health coverage. An estimated 2.6 billion people currently live with a health condition that may benefit from rehabilitation services, but this need is largely unmet.

    With the COVID-19 pandemic precipitating the development of telehealth services, it provided a critical opportunity for rehabilitation service providers to think of ways they can optimize their reach and design services that meaningfully include and benefit everyone, such as persons with disabilities. 

    Key improvements in OpenTeleRehab

    Since its launch in 2021, OpenTeleRehab has reached over 1000 users worldwide. In its original design, the telerehabilitation platform included accessibility features, but significant refinements were needed to meet the WHO-ITU Global standard for accessibility of telehealth services.

    In February 2025, a software developer identified and tested several areas for improvements before release, such as:

    • Enhancing compatibility with assistive devices

    Telehealth platforms are often not compatible with assistive devices that persons with disabilities may use, such as screen readers and Braille keyboards. Compatibility with other devices is greatly improved by making sure that every part of the OpenTeleRehab interface is properly labeled and navigable. With this upgrade, mobile screen readers now function seamlessly and dynamic text scaling allows users to adjust font size without disrupting usability.

    • Improving visual accessibility

    The visual features of telehealth platforms can significantly improve accessibility for many persons with disabilities, especially those with a vision impairment. In the OpenTeleRehab upgrade, the platform’s color contrast was optimized and a high-contrast mode was introduced. Furthermore, the screen magnification was enhanced, allowing users to scale the interface without distortion.

    • Augmenting communication accessibility

    Features such as text-to-speech and captioning improve the communication accessibility of telehealth platforms for many persons with a sensory, learning or language difficulty. In OpenTeleRehab’s first release, the text-to-speech functionality was limited to exercise instructions. The upgrade provided an opportunity to extend this functionality to the entire patient mobile app. Automated multilingual captions were also added to improve accessibility for users who are deaf or hard of hearing.

    • Simplifying navigation and access to help

    Clear interfaces that are easy to navigate can enhance accessibility for all users. But more than an enjoyable aspect, it is an essential component of the digital experience for persons with disabilities, especially those with a learning difficulty, anxiety disorder, or mobility impairment.

    The OpenTeleRehab navigation was streamlined by restructuring content to reduce unnecessary scrolling and introducing “Next” and “Previous” buttons. These features benefit users with motor impairments. Additionally, a new Help/Contact section displaying therapist and clinic phone numbers was also added to improve user support.

    Illustration 1: Implementation of auto captions for online calls

    Illustration 2: Harmonized display when the font size is set to a maximum

    Illustration 3: Creation of an easily accessible “Help/Contact” button

    Key challenges in implementing accessibility standards

    Bringing OpenTeleRehab in line with the WHO-ITU accessibility standards was a process that was not without its challenges. The main challenges that had to be overcome during the platform upgrade included:

    • Snowball effect when fixing a dynamic digital environment

    Redesigning the user interface to meet accessibility requirements led to unexpected complications that had to be addressed. For example, increasing text size initially caused overlaps with other interface elements, which required extensive work to fix. Manual corrections also had to be performed to scale elements properly following changes. Content that is dynamically generated proved particularly difficult to trace, requiring additional customisation and meticulous adjustments.

    • Limited access to a range of test tools and assistive devices

    One significant drawback was the limited range of accessibility test tools available to the software developer, which frequently prioritized the requirements of users with a vision impairment over those with motor or cognitive impairments. Moreover, possibilities to conduct compatibility tests were hampered by the lack of access to some assistive technologies, such as Braille keyboards.

    • Identifying quality captioning services

    Selecting an accurate, multilingual, and open-source real-time captioning service proved to be another challenge. Many options that were trialled were either too slow, lacked language support, or were incompatible with specific web browsers.

    • Repeated testing

    The most resource-intensive aspect of the platform upgrade was undeniably the act of performing accessibility tests. Each change required evaluation with multiple assistive devices to ensure compatibility. Resolving issues that automated tools could not detect made the process time-consuming and labor-intensive.

    Key lessons learned

    Accessibility should be a core design principle, not an afterthought. Retrofitting accessibility provided far more challenging than designing it from the start.

    Martin Jacobs / Rehabilitation and innovation policy development officer, Humanity & Inclusion

    One of the key lessons learned was that accessibility should be a core design principle, not an afterthought. Retrofitting accessibility, even if limited to specific features, into an existing user interface proved to be far more challenging than designing it from the start. By integrating the WHO-ITU accessibility standards from the beginning, development teams can significantly reduce work while enhancing usability.

    Another crucial lesson was the importance of involving persons with disabilities in initial design, testing and feedback. Developers and testers, despite their best efforts, may not fully understand the real-world needs of users with disabilities. Engaging individuals with disabilities from the beginning of the development process can help identify critical accessibility issues, ensuring a more inclusive and user-friendly experience – for patients and health practitioners alike.

    By improving its accessibility, OpenTeleRehab has evolved into a more inclusive telerehabilitation solution. Humanity & Inclusion remains committed to further accessibility enhancements and sharing insights with the global community.

    “,”datePublished”:”2025-05-02T12:00:00.0000000+00:00″,”image”:”https://cdn.who.int/media/images/default-source/2021-dha-images/opentelerehab.png?sfvrsn=698d08ad_1″,”publisher”:{“@type”:”Organization”,”name”:”World Health Organization: WHO”,”logo”:{“@type”:”ImageObject”,”url”:”https://www.who.int/Images/SchemaOrg/schemaOrgLogo.jpg”,”width”:250,”height”:60}},”dateModified”:”2025-05-02T12:00:00.0000000+00:00″,”mainEntityOfPage”:”https://www.who.int/news/item/02-05-2025-opentelerehab-a-success-story-of-inclusive-telerehabilitation”,”@context”:”http://schema.org”,”@type”:”NewsArticle”};
    ]]>

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  • MIL-OSI United Nations: EU supports UN initiative to better prepare for emergencies in the Caribbean

    Source: World Food Programme

    BRIDGETOWN – Building on the successful deployment of critical relief supplies in the aftermath of Hurricane Beryl that hit the Caribbean last year, the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP), the International Organization for Migration (IOM) and the European Union (EU) continue their collaboration to boost preparedness for large-scale disasters in the Caribbean.

    “In the Caribbean, most islands face multiple hazards along with the growing impacts of climate change. The intensity and unpredictability of events are steadily eroding the resilience of communities and systems, leaving them increasingly vulnerable. The EU is strengthening disaster preparedness across the Caribbean, equipping communities and systems to face these challenges head-on”, said Daniela D’Urso, European Union humanitarian expert in the Caribbean.

    Through the Directorate-General for European Civil Protection and Humanitarian Aid Operations (ECHO), the European Union has provided resources to replenish critical supplies. These items are now stored at the Caribbean Regional Logistics Hub in Barbados, a facility established by the Government of Barbados, the Caribbean Disaster Emergency Management Agency (CDEMA) and WFP.

    The Hub proved crucial during the joint regional response to Hurricane Beryl. As the first agency to pre-position emergency relief items at the hub, IOM was able to mobilize supplies from the facility for its response. Over a six-month period, in collaboration with the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), IOM distributed a total of 6,000 items reaching over 12,000 people in the most impacted areas in both Saint Vincent and the Grenadines and Grenada. 

     “We were able to deploy life-saving relief items including lights, tarpaulins, tents, ropes, repair kits and more, within days after Hurricane Beryl hit.  Our experience trying to get relief items into the Caribbean after Hurricanes Irma and Maria in 2017 taught us a lesson and, this time around, we were able to respond much more quickly, for the benefit of people who were affected.  We are thankful for donors like the EU who understood this need,” said Patrice Quesada, IOM’s Coordinator for the Caribbean.

    WFP facilitated the transfer of the items from Barbados to the islands of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines and Grenada most affected by the hurricane. 

    “Readiness is essential in this region and WFP is committed to supporting disaster preparedness and response in the Caribbean – and the continued partnership with the European Union has been critical. As the Caribbean Regional Logistics Hub goes into operation, we will expand storage and functionality in conjunction with CDEMA,” said Brian Bogart, Representative and Country Director, WFP Caribbean Multi-Country Office.

    #                 #                   #

    The United Nations World Food Programme is the world’s largest humanitarian organization saving lives in emergencies and using food assistance to build a pathway to peace, stability and prosperity for people recovering from conflict, disasters and the impact of climate change.

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